9 bodygraph centers are energy hubs with specific functions: Head (inspiration), Ajna (mind), Throat (manifestation), G (identity), Heart (willpower),...
What Are Centers in Human Design (and What Does Defined or Open Mean)?
If you've opened a Human Design bodygraph and felt like you were staring at a strange geometric map of triangles and squares, the centers are the heart of the whole picture. Nine of them. They are the fixed points through which your energy, awareness, and decision-making flow — think of them as the actual hardware of your operating system. Everything else in Human Design (gates, channels, the type, the profile) hangs off how these centers are, or aren't, lit up.
The Nine Centers and What They Actually Do
Each center has a specific biological and energetic theme. They are not abstract; they map to real systems in the body and to real functions in your life.
- Head (Crown) — inspiration, mental pressure, the question of "what if?"
- Ajna — conceptualization, processing, the place where you turn raw thought into belief.
- Throat — expression, communication, manifestation through voice and action.
- G Center (Identity/Self) — direction, love, identity, the sense of "I am here, moving this way."
- Heart (Will/Ego) — willpower, self-worth, material resources, the promise you make to yourself.
- Solar Plexus (Emotional) — emotional awareness, the wave, feelings.
- Sacral — life force, sexual energy, work ethic, the "yes/no" response of the body.
- Spleen — intuition, immune system, time, survival instincts, the body's quiet knowing.
- Root — adrenal pressure, the drive to act, the fuel that gets things started.
Curious if this is in YOUR chart? Calculate your free Human Design.
Calculate your chartIn your bodygraph, these nine shapes are either shaded (colored in) or white (empty). That single visual fact changes everything about how you experience each theme.
Defined Centers: Where You're Consistently Wired In
A defined center is one that has at least one gate activated on both sides of the same channel — in other words, the energy is fully connected and operating through you in a fixed, reliable way. You don't "turn it on." It is always on.
Defined centers are the source of your consistent, reliable energy. If your Throat is defined, for example, you have a fixed way of expressing yourself that doesn't really flicker depending on who you're with. If your Sacral is defined, you have a steady reservoir of life-force energy to work and create from — it's your birthright, not something you have to borrow from coffee.
People with many defined centers (a fully Generator type, for example) often experience the world as something that flows through them with relative stability. Their challenge is the opposite: getting too locked into their own way and missing the wisdom available in the undefined places.
Open Centers: Where You're a Student of Life
An open center is a theme you don't have fixed access to. The energy there moves through you conditionally — shaped by whoever and whatever is around you. This is not a flaw. It's actually where your most profound human wisdom lives.
Take the Solar Plexus. If it's open, you don't have a fixed emotional wave — you amplify and reflect the emotional state of the people and environments you're in. Someone walks in upset, you feel it as if it's yours. This is the shadow: emotional confusion, mood swings that don't seem to belong to you, and a tendency to make decisions based on feelings that aren't actually yours.
The gift of an open Solar Plexus, once you understand it, is enormous empathy and the ability to hold space for others' emotional processes without being consumed by them — when you stop trying to control or own those feelings as your own.
Every open center works this way. The Head being open means you can be inspired by anyone, and you're freed from the mental pressure of always needing a new idea. The Ajna being open means you can hold multiple, even contradictory, belief systems without being trapped by any of them. The Throat being open means you don't need to speak to be heard, and your real power lies in responding rather than initiating.
The Gift and Shadow Side by Side
Here's the nuance most people miss: every open center has both a shadow (the painful conditioning loop of trying to be what you aren't) and a gift (the wisdom that comes from not being fixed there).
- Open Head's shadow: feeling pressure to "have a thought" or "know the answer." Gift: accessing universal inspiration without being limited to one channel.
- Open G's shadow: identity crisis, looking to others to know who you are or where to go. Gift: a deep love of people and an ability to see and honor many different directions in life.
- Open Root's shadow: rushing to handle pressure from others as if it's yours. Gift: the ability to ride out stress rather than be driven by it.
The pattern is consistent: open centers are places where you learn by exposure. Defined centers are places where you teach by example.
How to Work With This in Real Life
1. Don't try to "fix" what's open. You cannot define a center through effort, affirmations, or healing. It's a mechanical fact of how you were born.
2. Get clear about what is yours and what isn't. When you suddenly feel a strong emotion, pressure, or inspiration, ask: "Is this actually mine, or am I in someone else's field right now?" This single question can be life-altering if you have any open centers.
3. Rely on your defined centers for strategy. Your consistent energy is where you can make reliable decisions. Open centers are for sampling wisdom, not for making big choices under pressure.
4. Use open centers to develop wisdom, not behavior. You will never behave the way a person with that center defined behaves. You can become extraordinarily wise about that theme by being a lifelong student of it.
In short: defined centers are where you are the expert of your own life, and open centers are where you are the expert of humanity. The bodygraph shows you, in a single glance, which is which.


