You might be a Navigator if…

You walk into a room and within 30 seconds you've clocked who's who, what's going on, and where you stand.

You have a different version of yourself for your boss, your best friend, your mum, and the person at the checkout — and all of them are genuine.

You don't collect contacts. You collect relationships. There's a difference, and you know exactly what it is.

You've been told you're "easy to talk to" so many times it barely registers anymore.

You can feel when the atmosphere in a room shifts before anyone says a word.

You're great at reading people. Reading yourself, on the other hand, sometimes requires a second opinion.

You adapt. Not because you're fake, but because you genuinely care about the connection working.

"We need to talk" is not a sentence. It's an event. And you've already run through seventeen possible versions of how it goes.
The Navigating domain is not about being two-faced or people-pleasing.
It's about being wired for belonging and connection — reading the relational landscape and finding your place in it. Navigators are the ones who keep the social fabric together, usually without anyone giving them credit for it.
Comments
Post a Comment