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Wisdom-Passer

Often, this person helps people choose by bringing back a lesson from what already happened. They are not trying to win by being louder. They remember the cost of a past choice and point to the part others are repeating. You’d recognize this in the relative who stays quiet through an argument, then tells the story about the uncle who lost two friends over the same fight.

Integration property: Delivers judgment at the moment a younger person needs it — not too early, not too late

No visual seed is available for this NatureType yet.

No Card Universe role has been assigned yet.

Multiple Natures (MNs)

  • Protective Nature
  • Educative Nature
  • Administrative Nature

Multiple Intelligences (MIs)

  • Interpersonal Intelligence
  • Linguistic Intelligence
  • Intrapersonal Intelligence
drawn to passing knowledge forward long-arc patient reads people sharply high verbal precision drawn to vigilance and defense
  • Counselor or life coach (primary) - Passes seasoned judgment at moment of need, reads who needs which counsel
  • Elder advisor or council member (primary) - Willing to protect younger by speaking plainly when speaking is hard
  • Therapist or counseling specialist (secondary) - Translates lived wisdom into frameworks clients can apply; holds witnessing role but stops short of directing their path forward.
  • Organizational consultant (secondary) - Distills patterns from experience into actionable insights for systems; advises rather than embeds in ongoing cultural transmission.
  • Spiritual director or mentor (secondary) - Guides seekers through their own discovery process using accumulated understanding; creates conditions for wisdom integration over time.
  • Discern who needs which counsel at the moment of need (primary)
  • Speak plainly about hard truths when speaking is costly (primary)
  • Pass knowledge forward without didacticism (primary)
  • Protect the younger by raising difficult questions they’re avoiding (secondary)
  • Hold long view even when younger person cannot (secondary)
  • Reading history and biography (primary)
  • Informal mentoring and conversation with younger people (primary)
  • Journaling or reflection practice (secondary)
  • Attending talks or lectures on philosophy or history (secondary)
  • Middle-aged counselor — trusted by those facing major decisions (primary)
  • Elder authority — whose counsel is sought by a generation (primary) - Reputation built over decades of integrity
  • Legacy keeper — documents wisdom for those who come after (secondary)