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​Orientation Complete

Congratulations! You have finished the self-evaluation. Now, count the number of letters you marked for each dimension: I vs O, P vs V, L vs E, and S vs A.


Mark the letter with the highest count in each dimension. These four letters together form your 4-letter Flight Orientation. Once you have it, match it with one of the 16 Flight Variations below to discover your unique profile.

Which Flight Orientation Fits You?

  1. IPLS

  2. IPES

  3. IVES

  4. IVLS

  5. IPLA

  6. IPEA

  7. IVEA

  8. IVLA

  9. OPLA

  10. OPEA

  11. OVEA

  12. OVLA

  13. OPLS

  14. OPES

  15. OVES

  16. OVLS

Let’s frame your Flight Orientation like a private jet crew—clearly, fully, and ready for takeoff.

  • Pilot – Your blindspot that needs attention at all times.

  • Co-Pilots (2) – These are the supportive aspects that guide the Pilot, balance decisions, and handle complementary tasks. They keep things smooth, like navigation, communication, and logistics in your Flight Orientation.

  • Emergency Brake – A protective response that activates under pressure. When healthy, it slows you down to avoid mistakes. But if it’s unhealthy, it can overreact, blocking progress and even causing damage—like a brake that locks the wheels mid-flight, hurting the jet.


Just Talk works like a Traffic Collision Avoidance System (TCAS) for couples, helping partners understand how they think, decide, and respond during real conversations.​​

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Each of the 16 Flight Orientations operates through a distinct combination of one Pilot, two Co-Pilots, and one Emergency Brake drawn from the eight core cognitive roles: KnowledgeSensationsImaginationExperimentationCommandmentCriticismWelfare, and Obedience.

The complete mapping for your type is shared by an expert after the first call, following careful discussion and nuanced analysis. Since the PJC model is theory-based, the results are best interpreted by someone with a psychology background to ensure the insights are accurate, meaningful, and not misunderstood.

Core Flight Orientation difference in one line

  • Visionary (V) lives in patterns, future possibilities, and meaning that is not yet visible.

  • Practical (P) lives in present facts, tangible evidence, and what can be verified through the five senses.

Structured personality mapping chart used in Private Jet clarity sessions for couples

Children who are different are rarely rejected for doing something wrong. They are rejected for not matching the majority’s operating system.

 

In school, this shows up early.
 

A child who thinks differently, speaks less, asks unusual questions, or lives in imagination is marked as odd, slow, or difficult. He is not disruptive, yet he does not fit. Because most systems reward sameness, the majority bonds quickly while the different child is left observing from the edge.

 

Teachers often side with what is manageable.
Peers side with what is familiar.
Society sides with numbers.

 

So the child learns a quiet lesson: belonging requires dilution.

 

Over time, this creates two paths.
Some children suppress themselves and learn to perform normality.
Others stay outsiders and grow inward, building rich inner worlds, intuition, creativity, and self-reliance.

The pain is not exclusion alone.
The pain is being unseen while being present.

 

Many of these children later become founders, artists, thinkers, and system builders. Not because rejection was good, but because solitude forced them to listen to themselves before they learned to listen to the world.

 

Under pressure, this gap becomes more pronounced.

1. Innovation Patterns Under Pressure

Visionary-dominant person (V)

 

How they operate

  • Thinks in leaps, metaphors, symbols, and imagined outcomes.

  • Works on something that does not exist yet.

  • Often cannot explain the idea linearly while it is forming.

 

Under pressure

  • Becomes more abstract and withdrawn.

  • Says things like:

    • “You won’t see it now, but this will matter later.”

    • “Trust the process.”

  • Feels misunderstood and invalidated.

 

Strength

  • Breakthrough ideas.

  • Radical innovation.

  • New categories, not improvements.

 

Blind spot

  • Poor at explaining progress in measurable terms.

  • Looks unproductive to others.

 

Practical-dominant person (P)

How they operate

  • Focuses on steps, tools, timelines, and visible progress.

  • Needs evidence before belief.

  • Values repeatability and proven methods.

 

Under pressure

  • Becomes more controlling and critical.

  • Asks questions like:

    • “What exactly did you do today?”

    • “Where is the output?”

  • Feels unsafe without clarity.

 

Strength

  • Execution.

  • Stability.

  • Making ideas real and usable.

 

Blind spot

  • Dismisses ideas that cannot yet be proven.

  • May kill innovation too early.

 

Innovation Under Tension

  • V feels: “You are blind to the future.”

  • P feels: “You are living in fantasy.”

 

Both are correct from their own cognitive lens.

 

2. Marriage or family life under high pressure

This is where it gets emotionally intense.

Intuitive partner or child (V)

 

Inner experience

  • Processing emotions, identity, meaning, and future self.

  • Often silent, lost in thought, or creatively absorbed.

 

What they need

  • Emotional trust.

  • Time to incubate ideas.

  • Faith without constant proof.

 

What they hear from P

  • “You are wasting time.”

  • “This makes no sense.”

  • “Be practical.”

This feels like existential rejection, not feedback.

 

Practical spouse or parent (P)

Inner experience

  • Responsible for safety, money, structure, and daily functioning.

  • Under pressure, perceived instability may become more pronounced.

 

What they need

  • Predictability.

  • Clear roles.

  • Visible contribution.

 

What they see in V

  • Uncertainty.

  • Risk.

  • No clear output.

 

This feels like threat to survival, not creativity.

 

Marital Pressure Dynamics

  • V experiences P as emotionally blind and restrictive.

  • P experiences V as irresponsible and unrealistic.

 

Love exists, but language of value is different.

The invisible tragedy

The Intuitive is often creating something real but invisible.
The Sensor is often protecting something real but unspoken.

Both are doing their job.
Neither feels seen.

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