Thank you for taking the ‘Home, Sweet Home’ test with 6 Moods. Based on your answers, we believe that your Home mood is T~ (Command).
Positive characteristics of a T~ Home mood:
T~ is the Thinking Disposition at its most steady and pragmatic. T~ is about getting things done, with maximum efficiency and a no-nonsense approach. It’s about giving and receiving Command. It’s about being Commanding. At its best, T~ is organised, pragmatic, dutiful, and efficient.
A T~ Home mood brings you a firm, fair and empowering ability to get complex things actually done. Whether it’s making sure that a domestic building project completes on time or that your army is adequately provisioned for the winter, a T~ Home mood will do the job, and do it thoroughly.
Always dependable, the T~ mood is the ultimate safe pair of hands. As with all the neutrals, T~ can be a mixture of either sceptical and energetic or optimistic and languid, but always with the hard-headed Thinking Disposition at its core. Solid, dependable, reliable and not given to flights of fancy, the T~ mood is the backbone of society, taking care of business, family and the community.
Food for thought for T~ Homers:
Letting go of the need to be right and to take command of situations is a T~ Homer’s biggest challenge. Whether it is by forcefully demanding others obey, or quietly guilt-tripping them with a humourless and relentless attention to duty, the T~ Homer’s desire to have things their way can sometimes wear others down.
T~ Homers can find it very hard to accept that their standards are not the only standards that count, or even that other people’s standards might possibly be more appropriate for the situation. They find it almost impossible not to proffer advice, whether it be about whom to marry or which queue to join at the checkout. The T~ Homer can be the ultimate back-seat driver and may often be very hurt by how little others seem to appreciate their advice. Learning to keep it to themselves can work wonders, as can training themselves to stop interrupting.
Developing this ability to hold their tongues (or to recognize their unspoken resentments …) and acquiring genuine listening skills will improve many of their problematic interactions, as will genuinely taking on board others’ viewpoints before they speak or act. Developing a tolerance for ambiguity, learning to consider more than one option before they form an opinion or make a decision, and allowing the people close to them a little more flexibility can bring enormous benefits to the T~ Homer’s interpersonal life.
We hope that you take those results in the way they are intended, i.e. possible avenues worth exploring. You can also find here more tests that will help.