The Enneagram didn’t just teach me about myself.
It reoriented how I lead and how I live.
I've spent my entire life studying why intelligent, capable people can't see how they get in their own way. I worked through myriad frameworks in psychology and leadership development. Each one gave me something. Then the Enneagram illuminated everything.
That's not hyperbole. The Enneagram made visible what had been organizing my interior life all along: the unconscious architecture underneath my choices, my relationships, my leadership, and my reactions. It didn't add new information. It revealed the structure that had been running the show without my awareness. Once I could see it, I could change it.
That experience is why the Enneagram sits at the center of my approach. I use it as a map and a mirror. Not as a label or a personality category, but as a precision instrument for identifying the motivations, fears, and defensive patterns operating below the level of conscious awareness. It makes the invisible visible.
I integrate the Enneagram with depth psychology, Internal Family Systems, Nonviolent Communication, Mindfulness, Somatic Awareness, and Neuroscience. Not because more frameworks are better, but because the Enneagram reveals the structure and these tools deepen the translation. Together, they bring into focus what has never been clear before. The question is whether you're ready to look.