Breaking out of your MBTI
Source ↗
👁 0
💬 0
When the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) swept Korea a few years ago, many embraced it as a playful distraction — something similar to blood type theories or horoscopes. It was fun, harmless and seemingly temporary. Few expected it to stay as long as it did. But MBTI didn’t fade. On the contrary, it evolved into a dominant cultural language, particularly among the younger MZ (Millennial and Gen Z) generation. Today it shapes how people introduce themselves, judge first impressions, arrange bl
Comments (0)