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<blockquote data-quote="SuZir" data-source="post: 658400" data-attributes="member: 14557"><p>I found it bit odd. I got 13 but found many questions bizarre and answer options lacking. </p><p></p><p>Apparently, according the test, you may not have much manners or diplomatic skills or common sense if you have 'good boundaries.' Nor are you supposed to take responsibility of things that affect you or others that some power above you has not given precisely to you.</p><p></p><p>For example, if my workmate is in trouble with deadline and can't make it, at worst case next day me, my other workmates and our employer is in big trouble. In fact we could in some cases even end up legally responsible. Of course depends from the matter and how final deadline it is but if it is important 'drawing boundaries' would certainly not cut it as explanation. </p><p></p><p>And many other questions were about social situations were someone is behaving some mildly iirritating way. Apparently 'drawing boundaries' is synonym of being totally tactless.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SuZir, post: 658400, member: 14557"] I found it bit odd. I got 13 but found many questions bizarre and answer options lacking. Apparently, according the test, you may not have much manners or diplomatic skills or common sense if you have 'good boundaries.' Nor are you supposed to take responsibility of things that affect you or others that some power above you has not given precisely to you. For example, if my workmate is in trouble with deadline and can't make it, at worst case next day me, my other workmates and our employer is in big trouble. In fact we could in some cases even end up legally responsible. Of course depends from the matter and how final deadline it is but if it is important 'drawing boundaries' would certainly not cut it as explanation. And many other questions were about social situations were someone is behaving some mildly iirritating way. Apparently 'drawing boundaries' is synonym of being totally tactless. [/QUOTE]
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