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This episode of Rewired continues a deep dive into the Enneagram’s processing centers, turning toward those who process with feeling—Twos and Fours.
Using Joey Schewee's NEW BOOK as a springboard, Jeff and Katie wrestle with how Twos and fours meet their needs and overcome their underlying feeling.
Through Twos, the discussion becomes concrete. Feeling processing shows up as a drive to cultivate connection, often at the expense of productivity or self-reflection. The Two’s outward energy—serving, engaging, and attuning—reveals both the beauty and cost of building identity through others. Jeff and Katie contrast this with the Three’s pursuit of admiration and the difficulty doing types have in understanding relational ambiguity. The result is a grounded exploration of how connection becomes both a compass and a vulnerability.
As the conversation expands to Fours (and begins moving toward Sixes), a richer picture emerges: feeling processors possess a heightened awareness of people, an instinct for emotional depth, and a persistent need to locate themselves within relationship. Whether through the Two’s service, the Four’s emotional magnetism, or the Six’s relational testing, each type reveals a different strategy for securing connection. What unfolds is less a tidy definition and more an invitation—to see how profoundly our wiring shapes what it means to feel “okay” in the world.
By Jeff Cook and T.J. Wilson4.9
311311 ratings
Connect with all our work : HERE
This episode of Rewired continues a deep dive into the Enneagram’s processing centers, turning toward those who process with feeling—Twos and Fours.
Using Joey Schewee's NEW BOOK as a springboard, Jeff and Katie wrestle with how Twos and fours meet their needs and overcome their underlying feeling.
Through Twos, the discussion becomes concrete. Feeling processing shows up as a drive to cultivate connection, often at the expense of productivity or self-reflection. The Two’s outward energy—serving, engaging, and attuning—reveals both the beauty and cost of building identity through others. Jeff and Katie contrast this with the Three’s pursuit of admiration and the difficulty doing types have in understanding relational ambiguity. The result is a grounded exploration of how connection becomes both a compass and a vulnerability.
As the conversation expands to Fours (and begins moving toward Sixes), a richer picture emerges: feeling processors possess a heightened awareness of people, an instinct for emotional depth, and a persistent need to locate themselves within relationship. Whether through the Two’s service, the Four’s emotional magnetism, or the Six’s relational testing, each type reveals a different strategy for securing connection. What unfolds is less a tidy definition and more an invitation—to see how profoundly our wiring shapes what it means to feel “okay” in the world.

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