Processing Centers | Eights
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We’re back in —and diving deeper into Joey Stabile’s Working Together Doesn’t Work, focusing on the Processing Center and what it reveals about how different types move through the world.
In this episode, we begin a discussion on Eights, Threes, and Ones—the “doing processors.” What does it mean to process through action? What gets gained—and what gets left behind—when execution becomes the primary lens for evaluating life?
We explore Joey’s framework of support centers—how doing can be backed by thinking or feeling—and how that shapes the differences between types that, on the surface, look similar. Along the way, we unpack:
- Why Eights often feel misunderstood—and what’s actually happening beneath their intensity
- The tension between execution and emotion in doing types
- How Threes, Eights, and Ones differ in their relationship to results, relationships, and responsibility
- Whether the “ends justify the means”—and how each type defines both ends and means differently
- The hidden cost of prioritizing action over reflection or connection
This conversation slows down to wrestle with real language, real experience, and the deeper structure behind how we assess: Am I good in the world?
We’ll pick up next time with Threes and Ones—but for now, we stay with the Eights, and what it means to move through life with force, clarity, and blind spots we don’t always see.