![]() ![]() You had your nine-ness taken from you and you were given a six. They tell you what they think you are, you take a test and confirm it, and then later if you do something they don’t like, they tell you that they are no longer sure that’s what you are. ![]() The essay is about my two coworkers who taught me about mine.ĭMO: They did something that seems to happen any time someone introduces you to astrology, or Myers-Briggs, or the Enneagram. You’re asked all these very detailed questions beyond basic personality questions, and through this sort of pentagram thing (which sounds like the devil’s work, but okay), they figure out your number on a scale of one to nine. Basically, in the essay I describe that numerology and astrology are like the back of a cereal box compared to this thing. ![]() Sloane Crosley: I’ll walk you through as much as I can, although the whole point of the essay is that I’m sort of a dilettante, and the people I’m with are experts. There was one such snippet that I wanted so badly not only to be the longest essay in the book, but possibly your entire next book it’s the one about the Enneagram. Daniel Mallory Ortberg: You mentioned that some of the pieces in this book were longer essays and some were snippets. ![]()
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