First, we focus on the very structure of your personality in terms of balance between the three states or dimensions: Parent, Adult, Child (or "PAC" for short). For each dimension, its share in your personality is given by a percentage. For example, 33% Parent with 22% Adult and 45% child would be a fairly balanced profile.
Having a "strong Child" dimension could represent someone who is or has remained "young". This refers to someone who exhibits a lot of spontaneity, intuition and "joie de vivre", with the implied advantages and drawbacks. This implies a personality which has not yet fully taken root. On the contrary, having a "weak Child" dimension can be interpreted as having an under-investment of emotions and feelings, as well as little intuition, joie de vivre, or spontaneity...
In the process of personality development, the Child appears first then the Parent, then the Adult. A good share should also be given to rules, as well as to cultural, family, and social environmental norms. This is the Parent dimension.
Thus, having a "strong Parent" dimension can be interpreted as having an over-investment in rules in one's relations to others. Having a "weak Parent" dimension can be interpreted as having an under-investment in rules, norms and even as a lack of maturity.
Then, the Adult appears. The Adult dimension represents the rational and objective part of your personality.Having a "strong Adult" dimension could be understood as having the ability to consider facts and nothing but the facts, at the cost of intuition, imagination, rules, or norms. On the contrary, having a "weak Adult" dimension may be interpreted as possessing an under-investment in one's perception of reality, by either being of too young a nature or too strict or prejudiced. Here is where you stand in terms of these three dimensions, according to the reference population...