When Your Strengths Become Liabilities

When Your Strengths Become Liabilities

Know when your strength is working for or against you

According to Merriam-Webster, a perfectionist is a someone who has a tendency to view anything that is not perfect as unacceptable.

Whenever someone calls me a perfectionist, I know they aren’t complementing me but rather, they mean to hurt my feelings. They mean to say that I have unrealistic high expectations; I am being a stickler to certain rules; I am being picky. And while all of these things are true, I embrace my perfectionism. I see it as a positive quality I have over others. It means that I pay attention to details. I am concerned about quality and improvement. It means that I care.

The problem was that sometimes, I cared so much that I would get stuck in what seemed to be an endless improvement loop. Something could always be done better. And so it was. Over and over again. There would be no “final” draft but a revision. Then another and then another.

My perfectionism is a double-edged sword. What is my strength is also my weakness when it gets overused and it is my own endless improvement loop to learn how and when to use it.

As it turns out, we all have strengths that when they get overused become a liability. Here’s how it looks according to each Enneagram type.

Type 1

Strength: Easily see what needs to be fixed or improved

When it gets overused: Can have unreasonable high standards

 

Type 2

Strength: Focus on other people’s needs

When it gets overused: Can ignore own needs

 

Type 3

Strength: Focus on winning and achieving

When it gets overused: Can be overly competitive

 

Type 4

Strength: Deeply feeling and in touch with emotions

When it gets overused: Can be dramatic

 

Type 5

Strength: Having boundaries

When it gets overused: Can be isolated and lonely

 

Type 6

Strength: Analytical and questioning mind

When it gets overused: Can get stuck in worst case scenario thinking

 

Type 7

Strength: Optimistic thinking

When it gets overused: Can have unrealistic expectations

 

Type 8

Strength: Assertiveness; going after what you want

When it gets overused: Can inadvertently push people away because they are afraid of you

 

Type 9

Strength: Seeing multiple points of view

When it gets overused: Can forget to assert their own opinion

While our strengths can help us succeed personally and professionally, overusing them can turn them into liabilities. Recognizing when our strengths are working for us versus when they are holding us back is key to maintaining balance, fostering growth, and building healthier versions of ourselves.

— —

Learn about 1:1 Enneagram-type specific coaching here.

Check out all of our free Enneagram resource guides here.

Ready to bring the Enneagram to your team? Book a leadership or team training and discover how the ARC Method and the Enneagram can transform your organization. Learn more about our training services here.

Let’s connect!

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mariaschwaller/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ms_enneagram/

Previous
Previous

Book Review: Good Anxiety

Next
Next

Look-A-Like Series: Type 1 vs Type 6