Vulnerable · Core

Conflict

Conflict relationship

PoLR · core of shame · inferiority · loss of self-conviction · exhaustion

Strengths

Functional parallel operation in short-term, purpose-limited, large-group contexts

Weaknesses

Loss of self-conviction · PoLR stimulation · severe long-term exhaustion · losing sight of oneself

Core

The Conflict relationship takes as its contact point the core of the Vulnerable block — the position (1D, Value 0.00) that is simultaneously the weakest, the least valued, and the most easily wounded.

The partner is doing nothing in particular — simply being themselves — yet their presence naturally awakens in you "the core of shame, inferiority, existential anxiety, PoLR (Point of Least Resistance: the core of the Vulnerable function — the 1D, Value 0.00 position, weakest and most easily wounded)".As a mechanism of dual coupling, stimulation of the Vulnerable core (1D, weak, Value 0.00) forcibly co-activates its dual counterpart, the Background core (4D, strong, habituated, automatic reaction, empty competence).

When shame and PoLR (Vulnerable core) are stimulated, a compensatory pattern of behavior — "automatically running to what you can do rather than what you want to do" — is triggered (Adler's compensation theory · MBCT's Doing mode · DMRS Acting out).As a mechanism of conflict function, activation of the Vulnerable core powerfully suppresses the Leading core (self-identity, conviction, self-efficacy, Value 1.00).

Self-efficacy and shame/humiliation are directly antagonistic — the more PoLR is stimulated by the partner's presence, the more your own conviction and agency are lost (Bandura 1982).Conversely, contexts that strengthen the Leading core ease the stimulation to PoLR and may produce temporary stability in the relationship.

Key Points

  1. 01 The partner's presence induces the core of shame, inferiority, existential anxiety, and PoLR — unintentionally, the other naturally stimulates your most easily wounded part
  2. 02 Stimulation of the Vulnerable core (weak) forcibly activates the Background core (strong): the more you are hurt, the more "automatic flight to what you can do" kicks in (Adler · MBCT · DMRS)
  3. 03 Strong suppression of the conflict function (Leading core): activation of PoLR directly costs you self-conviction and agency (Bandura 1982)
  4. 04 Mechanism of the experience "I lose sight of myself and can't use my real strengths when I'm with them"
  5. 05 Contexts that strengthen the Leading core can ease PoLR stimulation and produce temporary stability

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Psychological Foundations

Related Psychological Theories

Theories related to the psychological states likely to arise in this relationship. Learn more on each theory's explanation page.

※ Compatibility data is described using ILE-Q (Explorer) as the base type