People who always clean up after themselves at restaurants usually display these 7 unique behaviors, says psychology
Eliza Hartleygeediting.com
Saved by Shahar Bar-Yosef
People who always clean up after themselves at restaurants usually display these 7 unique behaviors, says psychology
Saved by Shahar Bar-Yosef
After careful consideration, however, I came to the conclusion that it makes far more sense to categorize people by their actions rather than by some generalized personality trait. Using this approach, people who can’t stay tidy can be categorized into just three types: the “can’t-throw-it-away” type, the “can’t-put-it-back” type, and the “first-tw
... See moreBehaviorally, this involves putting things into their correct form, which means cleaning, ordering, correcting, and improving them. When rigid-patterned people are upset, they will often start cleaning and ordering things: washing the dishes, vacuuming, straightening up.
A person whose conditioning includes intense concern about a given subject—tidiness, punctuality, looks, money—is likely to project that other people make judgments based on the same degree of concern.
As we examined the rooms, we began to notice their occupants’ psychological footprints and to glimpse the different ways personality is expressed. Three broad mechanisms—identity claims, feeling regulators, and behavioral residue—seemed to connect people to the spaces that surrounded them.
On the other hand, restoring order is soothing for them. When they are anxious or upset, they will often begin cleaning and putting things in order as a way of soothing themselves.