The Disrelate Diagnostic
A Tool for Identifying the Mode of Relational Incoherence You Are Encountering — and the Boundary That Repairs It
Purpose
To diagnose which structural mode of relational incoherence (Disrelate) is active in a moment of rupture — and to identify the exact boundary that restores coherence. Each Disrelate mode is a predictable pattern of relational failure. Each one contains its own repair.
When to Use It
- You feel confused, blamed, or destabilized in an interaction.
- Someone’s behavior feels “off,” but you can’t name why.
- You sense a pattern repeating across relationships or systems.
- You want to understand the wound beneath the behavior.
- You need a clear boundary that restores relational integrity.
How It Works
There are twelve finite Disrelate modes.
Each mode is:
- a pattern of relational incoherence
- driven by a wound
- repaired by a boundary
The Diagnostic moves through four steps:
- Name the feeling.
- Match the pattern.
- Identify the wound.
- Apply the boundary.
Step 1 — Name the Feeling
Your feeling is the first data point.
Common signals:
- Confusion
- Shame
- Pressure
- Hypervigilance
- Responsibility for someone else’s emotions
- Feeling like “the problem”
- Feeling erased, minimized, or managed
Your feeling is not the problem — it is the indicator.
Step 2 — Match the Pattern (The 12 Disrelate Modes)
Below are the twelve modes, each with its signature pattern.
| Mode | Pattern of Relational Failure |
|---|---|
| 1. Transactionality | You are treated as a function, not a person. |
| 2. Avoidance | Conflict, clarity, or accountability is evaded. |
| 3. Fragility | Your truth destabilizes them; they collapse or escalate. |
| 4. Extraction | Your labor, time, or emotional energy is taken without reciprocity. |
| 5. Inversion | The story flips; you become the problem. |
| 6. Confusion | Communication is vague, shifting, or contradictory. |
| 7. Urgency | Pressure is used to override your consent. |
| 8. Parentification | You are expected to regulate or stabilize the system. |
| 9. Role‑Casting | You are assigned a role that benefits the system. |
| 10. Liability‑Shifting | You are positioned to absorb consequences or blame. |
| 11. Pressure‑Valve Use | Tension is routed through you to protect the system. |
| 12. Shadow‑Rule Enforcement | The real rules contradict the stated rules. |
Match the pattern that best describes what is happening.
Step 3 — Identify the Wound
Each Disrelate mode is driven by a wound the system cannot face.
| Mode | Underlying Wound |
|---|---|
| Transactionality | Fear of genuine relationship. |
| Avoidance | Fear of conflict or accountability. |
| Fragility | Fear of emotional reality. |
| Extraction | Fear of self‑sufficiency. |
| Inversion | Fear of being seen accurately. |
| Confusion | Fear of clarity and responsibility. |
| Urgency | Fear of losing control. |
| Parentification | Fear of adult responsibility. |
| Role‑Casting | Fear of relational unpredictability. |
| Liability‑Shifting | Fear of consequences. |
| Pressure‑Valve Use | Fear of rupture or exposure. |
| Shadow‑Rule Enforcement | Fear of transparency. |
The wound explains the behavior — but does not excuse it.
Step 4 — Apply the Boundary (The Repair)
Each mode has a boundary that restores coherence.
| Mode | Boundary That Repairs It |
|---|---|
| Transactionality | Assert personhood: “I am not a function.” |
| Avoidance | Require directness: “Name the issue.” |
| Fragility | Hold steady: “Your reaction is yours.” |
| Extraction | Limit access: “I’m not available for that.” |
| Inversion | Re‑anchor reality: “That’s not what happened.” |
| Confusion | Demand clarity: “Put it in writing.” |
| Urgency | Slow the pace: “I decide my timeline.” |
| Parentification | Return responsibility: “That’s not mine to hold.” |
| Role‑Casting | Decline the role: “That’s not who I am.” |
| Liability‑Shifting | Align authority with responsibility: “If you decide it, you own it.” |
| Pressure‑Valve Use | Refuse the outlet role: “I’m not absorbing this.” |
| Shadow‑Rule Enforcement | Name the real rule: “The stated rule and the actual rule don’t match.” |
The boundary is not punitive — it is corrective.
Putting It All Together
The Diagnostic in one sentence:
Identify the feeling → match the pattern → name the wound → apply the boundary.
This restores:
- relational coherence
- emotional clarity
- structural integrity
- your sense of reality
And it prevents you from internalizing the system’s incoherence as your failure.
Field Impact
Using the Disrelate Diagnostic:
- breaks the spell of confusion
- reveals the architecture of relational failure
- protects you from absorbing blame
- restores your ability to see clearly
- returns responsibility to its rightful source
- gives you the exact boundary that repairs the rupture
This is the backbone of Relational Field Theory — the moment where perception becomes structure, and structure becomes repair.
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