S1 Self-esteem
Your confidence changes with the weather and the week you are having.
SBTI Type
The Whatever Person · 无所谓人
You really do mean it when you say “anything is fine.”
OJBK types are detached, low-drama, and hard to bait into small battles. You conserve energy by refusing to over-invest in choices that do not deserve a throne speech.

Each normal type is defined by a 15-dimension pattern. The cards below show the baseline temperament behind this result.
Your confidence changes with the weather and the week you are having.
You know yourself reasonably well, but emotions can still scramble the signal.
You are easily driven by growth, conviction, or a personal mission.
You swing between trust and caution depending on the situation.
You can invest deeply, but you still keep one hand on the brake.
You want both intimacy and space, and keep rebalancing them.
You would rather assume some goodness still exists in people.
You can follow systems, but you will bend them when needed.
A lot of life can feel like a routine you are only half buying into.
You check for danger before you chase rewards.
You think things through, but you usually land eventually.
You can execute, but your consistency depends on timing and mood.
You are socially flexible, but you do not force the moment.
You keep adjusting the distance depending on who the person is.
You are usually straightforward about what you think and feel.
The most common questions people search for about the SBTI OJBK type.
OJBK types are detached, low-drama, and hard to bait into small battles. You conserve energy by refusing to over-invest in choices that do not deserve a throne speech.
You really do mean it when you say “anything is fine.”
Take the free 31-question SBTI test on this site. The algorithm scores your answers across 15 behavioral dimensions and matches your profile against every named type. If OJBK is your closest match, it becomes your result.
SBTI does not publish official distribution data, so there is no verified answer on how rare OJBK is. What matters is that every named SBTI type — including OJBK — describes a real and distinct behavioral pattern. No result is objectively better, worse, or rarer than another.