Why add your personality type? When you share your MBTI and/or Enneagram, your analysis is filtered through a lens specific to your cognitive style. You'll see how your natural strengths as a thinker and creator show up in your writing — and where your personality-specific blind spots might be holding your script back.
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI): Describes how you perceive the world and make decisions. Your analysis will reflect your type's natural storytelling tendencies — for example, whether you lean toward big-picture ideation or detailed scene construction.
Enneagram: Reveals your core motivations, fears, and growth paths. Your feedback will highlight how these inner drives shape your characters, conflicts, and emotional arcs.
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The writer's strength in philosophical depth shines through in Heidi's empowering dialogue, creating a thoughtful and original close to the narrative. However, this focus might overshadow the need for sharper emotional and interpersonal tensions, potentially leaving the audience wanting more relational depth.
Option A: Add a brief confrontation where an audience member questions Heidi's spiritual advice during the post-performance talk. Option B: Escalate the fire incident with Linden struggling to control it, heightening risk to performers.
Why: Option A likely produces more interpersonal tension and ties into thematic elements but risks feeling forced in a celebratory scene; Option B tends to increase urgency and engagement but may overshadow emotional closure.Option A: Expand Heidi's tearful moment to include a short internal monologue revealing her fear of abandonment. Option B: Have Heidi share a vulnerable glance with Linden during the massage, hinting at unresolved issues.
Why: Option A likely deepens character relatability and emotional arc payoff but may slow pacing; Option B tends to enhance relational dynamics subtly but could dilute the scene's philosophical focus.The scene has minimal conflict, with dangers like fire and knives resolved calmly, lacking urgency in a final scene that could benefit from tying up loose ends.
"Flames leap up, but instead of panic"
This scene may reflect a tendency to downplay conflict, which could stem from a peacemaking inclination, but the presence of danger elements suggests external story demands, making personality a possible but not definitive factor.
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