This knowledge also helps you understand: who truly suits you and who only creates the illusion of comfort. This is especially important in romantic relationships, friendships, work, or business. You begin to see with whom you have real chances for mutual understanding, and with whom it will always be a struggle due to incompatible functions. Then you no longer have to suffer for long, because you understand why someone annoys you - even if they’re not doing anything bad. You start noticing how people think, why they speak or act the way they do, and most importantly - how they’re comfortable perceiving information. Thanks to this, communication becomes easier, with fewer misunderstandings and fewer pointless conflicts. You not only express your thoughts better, but you also precisely sense how to communicate with each specific person.
Understanding how each psychotype is structured opens up another important level - you begin to see other people more clearly. Not how they want to appear, but how they actually are. This makes it easier to find common ground, to understand with whom you can build a healthy interaction, and with whom you cannot. For example, there are people who need to hear things briefly, clearly, and to the point. If you try to “lead them” with long conversations, they’ll simply get tired - and there will be no result. But if you notice this and quickly adjust your style of communication, you’ll get a faster and more likely positive response - because you’re speaking the language this person actually perceives. You’ll also be able to better analyze your circle of communication. Because for each psychotype there are people with whom it’s “wow, we’re on the same wavelength,” those with whom it’s “fine,” and those with whom “it’s just not your story.” And that’s also perfectly normal.
Why will this course help you achieve these goals?
This is an important part of the human psyche that affects decisions, reactions, and desires - even if you don’t realize it. When you understand your inner child, the constant internal confrontation disappears. Instead of “forcing yourself” through sheer willpower, you begin to act from a place of inner connection and wholeness. Most people force themselves - because they “have to,” because it’s “right.” But real progress and ease come when you act with understanding, not compulsion. It’s the difference between making yourself do something and genuinely wanting to do it. But in order for true desire to arise, you need to understand what actually drives you. That’s where understanding your inner child becomes important - without external conditioning, without imposed goals or other people’s opinions. When you see yourself without illusions, you begin to clearly feel what you actually want. From this state, it becomes easier to set goals, move toward them, not give up at the first difficulties, and the process itself starts bringing satisfaction instead of feeling like just another obligation.
The shadow side is activated in stressful situations or when a person doesn’t accept themselves. They try to act against their own nature - and this is when crisis appears. A person starts believing in an illusionary version of themselves, trying to “be someone else,” and constantly acts through force. This leads to inner conflict, emotional burnout, and the feeling that “everything is correct, but not real.” This knowledge helps you notice even small things - for example, why a simple word in a conversation can hurt you, even though logically there’s nothing wrong in it. You’ll be able to figure out where this reaction comes from and either stop being offended or calmly and maturely explain to your conversation partner why exactly it touched you.
We will examine each psychotype in detail
We will analyze the influence of the shadow side on the personality
We will explore 4 cognitive functions that form the basis of our thinking, worldview, and reactions
We will analyze the concept of the “inner child”, which directly influences life choices