Nearby types often overlap on the surface
Two neighboring types can sound similar because they may share values, pacing, or outward behavior. The difference often sits underneath the surface in motivation, decision style, or what creates stress fastest.
Context changes the version of you that answers
People rarely answer from a neutral place every time. Work pressure, relationships, recovery, and self-image can all pull your answers toward a slightly different pattern depending on what season of life you are in.
The tie usually breaks in repeated decisions
When two types both feel familiar, watch what you do when nobody is asking you to perform. The steadier clue is not your ideal self, but the choice you repeat when you are tired, rushed, or trying to solve a real problem.
Use the ambiguity as a reading tool
A between-type result is often a useful invitation to compare, not a reason to give up. Read the two closest profiles side by side and ask which explanation keeps matching your patterns over time.
