High
You carry strong self-belief and a real pull toward admiration and status. At its best this looks like confidence, ambition, and the kind of presence that fills a room and gets people to follow. You back yourself, aim high, and aren't shy about wanting to be seen. The trade-off is that criticism can land hard, and other people's needs can slip out of view when the spotlight beckons. It's worth watching for the moment the need to be admired starts steering decisions — the same drive that fuels you can quietly cost you the people whose honesty you most need.
Moderate
You like recognition but don't depend on it. You can step into the spotlight when it's yours or hand it to someone else without feeling diminished, and a knock to your ego stings without derailing you. You want to be valued — most people do — but your sense of worth doesn't live entirely in other people's applause. This is a grounded, ordinary middle: enough self-belief to put yourself forward, enough perspective to share credit and hear 'no'. The only thing to watch is the usual human one — making sure you ask for what you're worth even when you're not chasing the limelight.
Low
You don't need the spotlight to feel secure. You share credit easily, take criticism without it stinging too much, and rarely feel the world owes you special treatment — status games hold little appeal. The lighter side of this is genuine humility and an ego that's easy to be around: people don't have to manage your self-image to work with you. The only watch-out runs the other way — make sure you still claim the recognition you've actually earned, put yourself forward when it counts, and don't let modesty talk you out of rooms and roles you belong in.