Profile 6/2 "Role Model / Hermit" in Human Design. A three-phase person who becomes an inspiring example through natural talents in maturity.

Role Model / Hermit
A three-phase person who becomes an inspiring example through natural talents in maturity.
The two lines of the profile
Line 6 - Role Model (conscious)
Your conscious role is that of an example to follow, and unlike other lines, your life is designed in three distinct movements that unfold over decades rather than weeks or months. Before the age of thirty, you are here to experiment widely, trying on roles, relationships, careers, and ways of being with an almost insatiable curiosity. This phase can look scattered or unfocused from the outside, and your own inner critic may judge you for not having found your "thing" yet, but every experiment is a data point. You are quietly gathering the raw material that will eventually become wisdom, and the variety of your early experiences is exactly what gives your later example its depth and humanity. Between thirty and fifty, you shift into the observation phase, climbing metaphorically onto the roof of your life to watch how things actually work from above. This is not a time of withdrawal from life, but a deepening of perspective: you begin to see patterns, you understand why certain experiments failed and others succeeded, and you develop a more compassionate view of yourself and others. The shadow here is detachment, cynicism, or the trap of staying on the roof too long, judging from a safe distance rather than re-engaging with what you have learned. The gift is genuine wisdom, the kind that can only come from lived experience followed by honest reflection rather than premature teaching. After fifty, the first two phases integrate and you become a living example, embodying what you have explored and observed so that others can see, without performance, what is possible. This is not about preaching or telling people what to do, but about radiating a certain quality of presence that naturally invites others to ask how you came to be the way you are. Your authority in this phase is earned, and people feel safe following your example because it is rooted in real trial and reflection, not theory. The practical invitation is to trust the timing of your life: resist forcing clarity in the experimental years, allow the middle years to be about looking and learning rather than performing, and know that your deepest impact is still ahead of you, ripening slowly into the kind of wisdom that can only be worn, not taught.
Line 2 - Hermit (unconscious)
There is a part of you that works while you sleep, a well of ability that flows through you so naturally that you barely register it as effort. This is your unconscious Line 2, the Hermit: a gift already wired into your circuitry, operating below the threshold of your awareness. Because the gift is unconscious, you cannot see it the way a third line can stand back and study their own process. You simply are the gift, and that is precisely why it escapes your notice. The talents others point out in you may feel like breathing to you, nothing special, just how things get done. You might even brush off a compliment with a shrug, thinking they are exaggerating, when in truth they are simply naming something real. The Hermit in you carries a quality of self-sufficiency and a quiet inner calling. You are not here to perform or to chase the spotlight of the first line; you are here to be called, and to follow the pull of your own nature into the niche where your gifts can be expressed. This can feel lonely at times, because the call is often formless until life brings you into contact with the people, projects, or communities that need what you have. Your solitude is not emptiness, it is incubation, the way a seed rests in dark soil before anything green appears. The unconscious nature of this line means the recognition tends to come from outside first. Friends, colleagues, even strangers may see you more clearly than you see yourself, and their reflections are not flattery, they are mirrors. The shadow here is the danger of dismissing your own brilliance, of treating your natural talents as if everyone could do what you do, and therefore of undervaluing yourself, undercharging for your work, or staying small when you are meant to grow. There is also the shadow of the recluse, the Hermit who hides so completely that the gift is never offered and never matures. The gift, when you accept it, is the art of being naturally yourself in a way that becomes a true resource for others. You do not have to manufacture worthiness or push yourself onto a stage. You only have to listen when life calls, trust that what comes easy to you is not trivial, and let yourself be seen by the people your gifts are meant to serve. A practical way to live this line is to keep a quiet record of what others thank you for, what they ask you to do, what they say you are good at, and then read it back to yourself as evidence of the gift you cannot see from the inside.
Your path is divided into three phases: the first 30 years are active trial and exploration; from 30 to 50 is time on the rooftop observing and gathering wisdom; after 50 you descend and become a genuine role model. Your natural second-line talents emerge easily and effortlessly.
Strengths
- ✦Wisdom earned through three transformational phases
- ✦Natural talents requiring little effort
- ✦Authority of a true role model
- ✦Ability to inspire through personal example
Challenges
- ◆Long and often unclear path to self-realization
- ◆Impatience during the second waiting phase
- ◆Need for solitude that others don't always understand
Strategy
Accept the non-linearity of your path — each phase is important. In the second phase, observe and restore rather than blame yourself for inaction. In the third phase, step toward people and share what life has taught you.

