Personality traits form at an early age and are fixed by early adulthood. Many important things about you change over the course of your lifetime, but your personality isn't one of them.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Personality is immediately apparent, from birth, and I don't think it really changes.
In preindustrial times, the idea of creating something was more related to your personality. Personality was something that you constructed; it's something you had to actively develop and work on. Now personality is something that you have.
I have a lot of different traits to my personality, depending on who I'm around, and what the dynamic in the situation is.
Much of what we now consider 'personality' will be explained away as structural and chemical functions of the brain.
I was a personality before I became a person - I am simple, complex, generous, selfish, unattractive, beautiful, lazy and driven.
We cannot know the young child's personality by studying his systems of interest, for his attention is as yet too labile, his reactions impulsive, and interests unformed. From adolescence onward, however, the surest clue to personality is the hierarchy of interests, including the loves and loyalties of adult life.
Different people bring out different aspects of ones personality.
I would not describe my personality. And I think when you describe people, you are making a mistake. That's not how they are; that's how you perceive them at that moment. It's limiting in front of something that is magnificent and unlimited: life.
My personality is that I like to express myself, and that is not something I will look to change.
Personality is less a finished product than a transitive process. While it has some stable features, it is at the same time continually undergoing change.