Your primary type

ATM-er
The Sponsor
You think I'm made of money?
Congratulations, you have tested into one of the rarest personalities on the planet — it is statistically rarer than spotting a unicorn on a Tuesday. You may become one of the great unsolved mysteries of modern finance. To be clear, the ATM-er does not literally 'give away money.' The ATM-er just pays, forever. You pay with your time. You pay with your energy. You pay with your patience. You pay with the peaceful night you were supposed to have. You are like an old, battered, weirdly reliable ATM: people insert their anxieties and their problems, and what comes back out is 'don't worry, I got you.' Your entire life is a grand, one-person bill-splitting performance that nobody is applauding. You absorb a waterfall of demands with the calm of a boulder, and once in a while, late at night, you stare at your (emotional) invoice and whisper, 'This cursed, uncontainable sense of responsibility of mine.' Hey — since you got such a beautiful result, any chance you could Venmo the original author five bucks?
Your 15-dimension scorecard
Self Model
You mostly know what you are about, and a random stranger cannot talk you out of it.
You have a clear read on your temper, your wants, and where your hard limits are.
You are easily pulled forward by a goal, a growth arc, or some belief you actually care about.
Emotion & Attachment Model
You tend to trust the relationship itself. A little turbulence does not send you into a tailspin.
Once you commit, you go all in. Your time, energy, and feelings get handed over in full.
You want closeness and independence in roughly equal doses. The dial moves depending on the person.
Attitude Model
You tend to believe in basic decency and good intentions. You do not rush to sentence the world.
You run on order. If there is a process, you will honor it. Improv is not your love language.
You do things with direction. You roughly know which way you are pointed.
Action Drive Model
You are lit up by results, growth, and the feeling of momentum.
You deliberate, but you do not freeze. Standard, healthy hesitation.
You push hard. A task that has not landed feels like a splinter in your brain.
Social Model
You will engage if someone comes to you, but you will not force it. Average social elasticity.
You run strong boundaries. Get too close and you will instinctively take half a step back.
You say what you mean. What is in your head mostly comes out of your mouth.