The Ajna center in Human Design is the second triangle from the top of your bodygraph. If it’s white in your chart, then you have an undefined Ajna center. If it’s colored in, then you have a defined Ajna Center. One is not better than the other, they’re just different.
Ajna center (also called the Mind center) is an awareness center for your perspectives, thoughts, opinions, answers, solutions, processing our thoughts, and belief systems.
Your Ajna center filters and processes inspiration from your Head center into information you can use to review, reflect, and communicate.
53% of the population has an undefined Ajna center, myself included.
Undefined Ajna Center in Human Design: Gifts
Open or undefined Ajna center gives you a textbook definition of an open-minded person. You are someone who can understand multiple perspectives without attaching yourself to one of them. Without making it your ultimate personal truth.
You have a gift of solving other people’s problems because you can be detached and look at things objectively.
The same way that someone with an undefined Solar Plexus can feel other people’s emotions, with an undefined Ajna center, you can read other people’s minds. You’re able to pick up on everyone else’s thoughts and opinions.
You’re able to think outside of the box and have new perspectives. Your gift is a broad understanding of ideas and seeing ideas from multiple perspectives.
You’re designed to be open to seeing many perspectives instead of attaching yourself to one.
Fun fact: Albert Einstein had this center undefined and we all know him as a genius with a brilliant mind.
If you have an undefined Ajna, you also have an undefined Head center. Here’s a blog post all about open Head center.
Learn more:
Deconditioning Open G Center in Human Design
Undefined Root Center in Human Design Explained
Open Mind Center in Human Design: Challenges
With an open Ajna center, you can have a need to be sure about something and to present yourself as someone who is certain.
Know that just because someone is talking about something with confidence and certainty, doesn’t mean they’re right. I know some people who talk about their views as if they’re the ultimate truth, but that doesn’t mean that their opinion is true.
The challenge here can be pretending to be certain. Wanting to convince others of what you know and wanting others to think you don’t have any doubts.
There can also be this pressure to hold onto an opinion or belief because you don’t want to seem like you don’t know what you’re talking about.
The wisdom of an undefined Ajna is to realize that there’s no need to have a fixed opinion about anything.
Instead, start practicing saying ‘I don’t know’. Let go of the need to be certain.
You can explore different perspectives but not attach yourself to any of those.
This doesn’t mean that you don’t have opinions. Instead, allow yourself to be fluid and flexible when it comes to your opinions without taking other people’s opinions as your personal truths.
Don’t get defensive and try too hard to be certain or choose just one opinion. You don’t have to have everything figured out. You don’t have to know all the answers.
Your gift is being truly open-minded, understanding different perspectives, and being willing to explore new perspectives without attaching yourself to any one of them.
This blog post was first published as a video on my YouTube channel. Watch here to learn more about my personal experiences having an undefined Ajna center & stay til the end for some helpful journal prompts.
Until the next time,
Ivana
P. S. Want to learn more about your specific Design? Book a 90-minute Human Design reading here.
human design open ajna center open mind center undefined ajna center undefined mind center
Leave a Comment