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    Pain Threshold Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of Pain Threshold? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Pain Threshold from Disco Elysium and what is the personality traits.

    Pain Threshold
    ENTJ

    ENTJ (8w9)

    Pain Threshold personality type is ENTJ, ESFJ, INTJ.

    Pain Threshold is a term used by Carl Jung to describe a person who feels at a standstill, a person who gets to a point where he or she can’t go any further.

    ENTJ – Extroversion, Intuition, Thinking, Judging

    ESFJ – Extroversion, Sensing, Feeling, Judging

    INTJ – Introversion, Intuition, Thinking, Judging

    What is Pain Threshold Personality Type?

    According to Carl Jung, the Pain Threshold personality Type is a person who is constantly holding back from moving forward.

    In other words, if you’re a Pain Threshold personality type you always feel that you’re just at a “standstill” and you don’t actually know how to move forward.

    You often have this pull between being a fully realized person and being a martyr – a person that holds back from their full potential. You struggle with the decision of whether or not to be fully in or completely out in life. You constantly struggle with the pain of holding back your real self.

    The threshold of pain or pain threshold is the point along a curve of increasing perception of a stimulus at which pain begins to be felt. It is an entirely subjective phenomenon. A distinction must be maintained between the stimulus and the person's or animal's resulting pain perception. Although an IASP document defines "pain threshold" as "the minimum intensity of a stimulus that is perceived as painful", it then goes on to say that: Traditionally the threshold has often been defined, as we defined it formerly, as the least stimulus intensity at which a subject perceives pain. Properly defined, the threshold is really the experience of the patient, whereas the intensity measured is an external event. It has been common usage for most pain research workers to define the threshold in terms of the stimulus, and that should be avoided... The stimulus is not pain and cannot be a measure of pain.

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