Agatha MBTI & Enneagram | The School for Good and Evil

ENFJ 1w2 Characters

Agatha is fiercely moralistic and highly opinionated, and has no compunctions about lecturing other people about their perceived lack of moral behaviors. But she also puts her own feelings aside to accommodate Sofie’s needs and wishes, self-sacrificing in order to ensure her best friend’s happiness. Agatha hates where she winds up, and only goes along with princess lessons out of fear of being expelled (which in this magical world means killed). She always wants to do the right thing, and insists others do it as well. Agatha shows strong intuition, since she figures things out along the way—including what happens to the students who are expelled, and that the wish fish are previous students, and that a giant, hideous bird is one of her friends. Agatha persists in taking action on Sophie’s behalf or that of her other friends all the time, showing a tendency to proactively leap into action. She saves Sophie at first from being dragged away by the vulture-creature (which winds up taking them both to the school). Then she is proactive in trying to get across to the other school (taking risks by climbing up on the balcony, stumbling into the library, and witnessing things she shouldn’t see). In the woods, she gets annoyed at Sophie for being worthless and not doing anything to help the prince she supposedly loves (since she would do that herself). She later catches up a sword and defeats the bad guy (in part). ISFPs believe on acting on their feelings, and that’s what she does, from feeing the wish-granting fish to how quickly she reacts in bad situations. Agatha works to figure out why things are happening and what’s going on and how to deal with them, even telling off teachers and the boy she likes.

Enneagram: 1w2

Agatha is prim and proper, but also moralistic and at times, preachy in how she tells other people how they ought to behave. She doesn’t want to leave her mother because of a sense of being ‘needed’ (she needs me to take care of her). And when Sophie needs her at the school, Agatha devotes her entire focus and attention to ensuring that her best friend finds true love, receives true love’s kiss, and is either allowed to leave or transfer schools. She reacts to things instantly and gets upset when others are vapid, shallow, or selfish; she is so selfless that she can free the wish fish into their original human form, and spends a lot of her time thinking about the needs and wishes of others, even when it means denying her own growing affection for a prince. She’s not above telling him off for his behaviors, either.