I put a lot of weight on feelings and am weirdly in touch with them, which is not typical for an engineer.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
It's hard to do that with people who think emotionally. A lot of people think in terms of people, emotions, and feelings. That's more complicated. Engineering mentality makes it, in theory, a little easier.
I'm not even an engineer. I don't have a college degree; I hire guys with college degrees.
My background educationally is physics and economics, and I grew up in sort of an engineering environment - my father is an electromechanical engineer. And so there were lots of engineery things around me.
I'm actually very sensitive to energies, and when people are not aligned, I can feel that.
I'm an engineer. I'm a techie, really.
I had a lot of trouble with engineers, because their whole background is learning from a functional point of view, and then learning how to perform that function.
Anytime you work with materials that are deep parts of yourself, you feel revulsion at showing things about yourself that you don't want people to know.
Whether I'm riding a horse or driving a car, I'm feeling them, judging what they're doing, trying to work out what I can take them up to.
I usually describe myself as an engineer; that's basically what I've been doing since I was a kid.
If you go into any physics lab, everybody is depressed and feels isolated. We don't get any feedback that anybody cares about what we're doing.