Subtype is less about adding another label and more about noticing which instinctive concern activates first under stress.
Everyone has SP, SO, and SX, and they usually show up as a dominant-secondary-blind stack.
This test is not a diagnostic tool. Use it as a guide for self-observation.
Treat the result as observation points rather than a fixed label.
🛡️
SP Self-preservation
This instinct activates first when stability and survival feel shaky: routines, money, safety, and daily upkeep.
“When your condition or daily rhythm falls apart, does anxiety rise quickly?”
🌐
SO Social
This instinct reacts first when belonging, roles, networks, and reputation feel unstable.
“If your place in a team or the group atmosphere feels uncertain, does it shake you deeply?”
🔥
SX One-to-one
This instinct feels the loss first when intensity, attraction, and deep connection start fading.
“If there is no person, goal, or relationship that strongly pulls you in, does your energy drop fast?”
Here, sx does not mean sexuality. It refers to intensity, charge, and immersion.
Imagine which side becomes anxious first in the situations below.
1) When your schedule breaks down and your condition drops
🛡️ SP: I restore sleep, meals, and routine first
🌐 SO: I worry that my role, team atmosphere, or evaluation may wobble
🔥 SX: My energy drops and things start to feel meaningless
2) When you sense subtle distance in a relationship
🛡️ SP: If life feels stable, I can tolerate the distance
🌐 SO: I worry that my place in the network or group may become unclear
🔥 SX: What hurts most is losing the sense of specialness or intensity
3) When pressure around performance and evaluation grows
🛡️ SP: Money, livelihood, and practical stability come first
🌐 SO: My position, evaluation, and role become the central issue
🔥 SX: I need a compelling goal or spark to keep going
Subtype is less about adding one more personality label and more about noticing what your attention protects first under stress.
Everyone has SP, SO, and SX. They usually appear as a stack: dominant, secondary, and blind spot.
Use the result as a self-observation guide rather than a diagnosis.