Identity Abounds

on personality and culture

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Recent blog posts

  • “Yes, and…” Improv skills for intercultural communication
  • Enneagram stances: how to develop your repressed center of intelligence
  • Western thought is Western, not universal
  • Natural and adapted personality styles
  • The most beautiful Sufi quotes for each Enneagram type
  • sufi quotes for each enneagram type

    The most beautiful Sufi quotes for each Enneagram type

    Sufism, the mystical worldview of Islam, is a source of wisdom. I collected quotes for each Enneagram type that can guide us on our individual paths of growth and spirituality. Whatever your religious orientation is, Sufism can teach us insights that are mind-boggling and heart-stirring. All we need is an open mind and an open heart. One Sufi scholar, Hazrat Inayat Khan, described Sufism as “not a religion nor a philosophy, it is neither deism nor atheism, nor is it…

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    Related posts

    Core values of all Enneagram types (and how to use them to type someone)

    Answers to the 4 most common criticisms of the Enneagram

    3 reasons why the Enneagram is the best personality type system around

  • On Hinduism, Hitler, and the mosaic of truth

    I lived in New Delhi for half a year, where I was lucky to find a good and interesting friend. When one day we met over coffee, he showed me a beautiful sentence: “… the material which one has acquired through reading must not be stored up in the memory on a plan that corresponds to the successive chapters of the book; but each little piece of knowledge thus gained must be treated as if it were a little stone…

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    Related posts

    woman with basket on head walking down street

    On India, poverty and religion

  • Andalusia’s ambivalence: between convivencia and Islamophobia

    Andalusia's history is often romanticized for its 'convivencia': religious coexistence. But this image exists alongside widespread Islamophobia.

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    Islamic State: media and identity

    woman with basket on head walking down street

    On India, poverty and religion

  • Islamic State: media and identity

    The Islamic State might have been defeated, but ideas does not die so easily. And they are different from what 'the West' thinks.

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    In search of Buenos Aires

    high rise buildings

    Dubai: world’s least cosmopolitan city

    Identity is both personal and social

  • brown concrete building near body of water during night time

    Amritsar: conflict and harmony

    The city of Amritsar in north-western India is not big, but attracts more visitors than the Taj Mahal. Its two main attractions are symbols of harmony and conflict, respectively: the Sikh religion's holiest temple complex where everyone is welcome, and the nearby border with Pakistan where on a daily basis people on both sides assemble to celebrate the gates closing. I wrote this article for the Center for Intercultural Dialogue.

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    A Sunday in Delhi: the difficult case for inter-religious dialogue

    On Hinduism, Hitler, and the mosaic of truth

    woman with basket on head walking down street

    On India, poverty and religion

  • A Sunday in Delhi: the difficult case for inter-religious dialogue

    Leaves falling from the trees, umbrellas appearing in the streets, and girls covering up their faces with scarfs: in New Delhi these are signs that the summer sun is arriving. In India’s hottest season, mornings have to be put to good use. Many a Sunday I would get up at six o’clock to visit the weekly Old Delhi book market, returning before the heat would become unbearable and in time for my weekly Bible group. One morning, walking through the…

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    Related posts

    brown concrete building near body of water during night time

    Amritsar: conflict and harmony

    Tenochtitlan

    Still(ed) waters: a very short history of Mexico City

    On Hinduism, Hitler, and the mosaic of truth

  • woman with basket on head walking down street

    On India, poverty and religion

    Different religions deal with poverty differently, and in India you find a lot of both. At one point or another, the visitor of the subcontinent will inevitably be faced with more misery than one can bear and the challenging question how to approach it. What answers do religions provide?

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  • Tenochtitlan

    Still(ed) waters: a very short history of Mexico City

    How a lake turned into one of the largest cities in the world: this is the story of Mexico City. Before the Spanish conquest, Mexico City was a kind of Venice in the middle of a couple of connected lakes, surrounded by volcanoes. It was called Tenochtitlan: ’the place of many tunas’ (notwithstanding the watery environment, a tuna here being the fruit of a cactus).

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    Related posts

    woman with basket on head walking down street

    On India, poverty and religion

    Andalusia’s ambivalence: between convivencia and Islamophobia

    On Hinduism, Hitler, and the mosaic of truth

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Hi, I’m Linda.
I am a trainer with a focus on culture and personality.

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