Sunday, December 18, 2011

Proust Questionnaire



In her book, "Stepping Out of Line"  Nell answers the Proust questionnaire with her own answers as a way of discovering insights into her personality. I am reprinted here the Proust questionnaire with Proust’s answers. (To see Nell’s answer you will have to look into her book.)

This is a questionnaire that allows us to look deep into ourselves and see what resonates with us and what makes us tick. Take a minute to answer the Proust questions, your answers may surprise you and offer some insights into your nest steps, overcoming obstacles, understaning what makes you tick, or just be a reflective exercise helping you get in touch with the inner you.

The Proust Questionnaire


  • What do you regard as the lowest depth of misery?
To be separated from Mama

  • Where would you like to live?
In the country of the Ideal, or, rather, of my ideal

  • What is your idea of earthly happiness?
To live in contact with those I love, with the beauties of nature, with a quantity of books and music, and to have, within easy distance, a French theater

  • To what faults do you feel most indulgent?
To a life deprived of the works of genius

  • Who are your favorite heroes of fiction?
Those of romance and poetry, those who are the expression of an ideal rather than an imitation of the real

  • Who are your favorite characters in history?
A mixture of Socrates, Pericles, Mahomet, Pliny the Younger and Augustin Thierry

  • Who are your favorite heroines in real life?
A woman of genius leading an ordinary life

  • Who are your favorite heroines of fiction?
Those who are more than women without ceasing to be womanly; everything that is tender, poetic, pure and in every way beautiful

  • Your favorite painter?
Meissonier

  • Your favorite musician?
Mozart

  • The quality you most admire in a man?
Intelligence, moral sense

  • The quality you most admire in a woman?
Gentleness, naturalness, intelligence

  • Your favorite virtue?
All virtues that are not limited to a sect: the universal virtues

  • Your favorite occupation?
Reading, dreaming, and writing verse

  • Who would you have liked to be?
Since the question does not arise, I prefer not to answer it. All the same, I should very much have liked to be Pliny the Younger


http://www.amazon.com/Stepping-Out-Line-Lessons-Women/dp/0767924843/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1324008477&sr=1-1

1 comment:

  1. I think these questions can only be answered at specific stages in ones life. Responding at 25 is dreaming, responding at 65 is hindsight.

    ReplyDelete