Quasi-Identity
Quasi-Identity relationship
Strengths
Short-term competence-based collaboration · Parallel operation with similar strengths
Weaknesses
Long-term chronic mutual exhaustion and emptiness · Betrayal of the "we should understand each other" expectation
In the Quasi-Identity relationship, the partner's presence induces the psychological state of "habituation, automatic reaction, empty competence, exhaustion".
Contact occurs at the core of the Background block — the contact point (Value 0.00) that is a powerful 4D function yet the least valued.Because each partner appears to have similar abilities and to move in similar ways, the impression "we should understand each other" arises easily — but the actual substance of the contact is a structure of exhaustion, where each induces in the other a "forced automatic-reaction mode".
As a mechanism of dual coupling, stimulation of the Background core (4D, strong, Value 0.00) forcibly co-activates its dual counterpart, the Vulnerable core (1D, weak, core of shame, PoLR (Point of Least Resistance: the core of the Vulnerable function — the 1D, Value 0.00 position, weakest and most easily wounded), Value 0.00).The longer forced habituated competence (Background core) continues, the more the wound of "what I really want to do is not being met" (Vulnerable core) accumulates (Adler · MBCT Doing mode).
As a mechanism of conflict function, activation of the Background core powerfully suppresses the Suggestive core (need for belonging, secure attachment, fulfillment, deep craving, Value 1.00).When the forced pattern of "doing because I should · doing because I can" (Background core) dominates, fulfillment of the primary motivation of "being there because I want to · doing because I want to" (Suggestive core) becomes difficult (MBCT Doing mode).
Key Points
- 01 The partner's presence induces habituation, automatic reaction, empty competence, exhaustion — "I can but don't want to · I can move but am not satisfied"
- 02 Activation of the Background core (strong) couples with the Vulnerable core (weak): forced competence expression → PoLR accumulation, a chain of exhaustion (Adler · MBCT)
- 03 Strong suppression of the conflict function (Suggestive core): the forced behavior pattern directly blocks fulfillment of primary craving (MBCT Doing mode)
- 04 Contrast with Identity (authenticity, conviction): surfaces are similar, but the reality is "empty competence resonance"
- 05 Behind the impression "we should understand each other" lies the structure "we exhaust each other"
⚠️ Cautions for Good Relationships
Quasi-Identity easily produces the surface impression "similar · seem to understand each other", and discomfort rarely surfaces in short-term social contexts. However, when brought into long-term close contact, collaboration, or romance, the chronic pattern of empty competence expression — "I can but don't want to · I can move but am not satisfied" — fixes itself, and the structure of mutual exhaustion solidifies. Moreover, as the expectation "we should understand each other" accumulates, emptiness easily transforms into disappointment.
🔧 Improvements for Bad Relationships
When forced automatic reactions and empty competence have become chronic, it is effective to create contexts where each partner can naturally express "what I really want · my deep craving" — an evaluation-free creative space, a dialogue space where each can speak their desires openly. Placing the pair in contexts where primary craving (Suggestive core) is naturally fulfilled structurally pushes back the forced-competence mode. Contexts making "what we want to do" — rather than "what we can do" — the contact point become the entry into transformation.
🔄 Reversal Conditions
Good → Bad
Shift to long-term close contact or collaboration · accumulation of the "we should understand each other" expectation · continued contact while both have lost outside fulfillment (duality, benefit-type relationships)
Bad → Good
When contexts emerge in which "what we want to do · deep cravings" can be naturally expressed · when spaces are set where primary craving is fulfilled · when both recognize the structure "we can do similar things but cannot fulfill each other" and reset expectations
✅ Conscious Improvement
- Let go of the expectation "we must be similar" and accurately recognize the relationship as "can do similar things but cannot fulfill each other"
- Consciously create contexts that make "what we want to do · deep cravings" the contact point
- Detect early when forced competence expression is starting and switch context
- Deliberately secure fulfillment of primary craving in other relationships (duality, belonging-type)
Early
Early: Begins with the impression "we seem to understand each other because we're similar"
Middle
Middle: As it deepens, the pattern of empty competence expression settles in
Long-term
Long-term: Mutual exhaustion chronifies and the state "we should understand each other but aren't satisfied" fixes itself
Long-term Risks
- Deepening exhaustion through chronic empty competence expression
- Fixation of disappointment from the gap between "we should understand each other" and reality
- Long-term non-fulfillment of primary cravings
⚠️ Warning Signs
- Being together, you "can" do things but feel "unsatisfied"
- Both of you are tired yet can't separate
- The feeling "similar yet different" has become chronic
Dialogue Style Characteristics
- Similar topics, similar viewpoints, similar strengths energize conversation but depth is lacking
- Words like "I get it" and "same here" appear often, but primary fulfillment rarely arises
- Conversation centers on "what we can do" rather than what we want to do
⚠️ Typical Misunderstandings
- Mistaking the resonance of similar viewpoints for "deep mutual understanding"
- Misreading the resonance of "what we can do" as resonance of "what we want to do"
- Failing to notice that the cause of exhaustion is structural
👥 Role in the Team
Parallel operation with similar strengths is possible, but long-term it tends to exhaust both sides. Role design limited to short-term competence-based collaboration is necessary.
📋 Project Suitability
Functions only in short-term, competence-clear collaborative projects. Placement in long-term close-collaboration projects easily produces exhaustion.
🏢 Hiring / HR Considerations
Placement on the same long-term project tends to accumulate exhaustion. Periodic role rotation and separate securing of sources of fulfillment are important.
Impact on Mental Health
Chronic empty competence expression and long-term non-fulfillment of primary craving deepen psychological exhaustion and self-alienation. Repeated experience of "similar yet unsatisfying" can distort self-understanding.
Growth Potential
Only the secondary growth of becoming aware of one's own craving — "what I want to do". Securing sources of fulfillment elsewhere is the top priority.
Qualitative Exhaustion Level
Medium to high (grows with long-term contact)
What is a Third Party Type?
Third party types are those who, by intervening as a "third presence" in this two-type relationship, can ease tension or elicit psychological fulfillment. This section shows which third party types are particularly effective for this pairing, based on how they relate to A and B respectively.
⚠️ In this relationship, each person's dual type functions as an "individual safe base". No shared third party exists, and separate contexts are the only path to improvement.
Individual dedicated support 1
Support exclusive to ILE-Q — functions only in LIE-Q's absence.
Individual dedicated support 2
Support exclusive to LIE-Q — functions only in ILE-Q's absence.
※ The following description is written from the perspective of the base type "ILE-Q (Explorer)"
In a Quasi-Identity pair (ILE-Q + LIE-Q), ILE-Q's Duality (SEI-D) stands in Conflict to LIE-Q, and LIE-Q's Duality (ESI-D) stands in Conflict to ILE-Q — each other's support is the other's most difficult partner. Improvement, if any, arises only when each independently contacts their own dual type in an entirely separate context and has their cravings fulfilled individually. No shared third-party solution exists for this relationship. SEI-D and ESI-D are themselves in a Quasi-Identity relationship.
Function-Block Analysis (Model K)
Maps each type's leading-core (pos 1) program+creative pair to the block and position where it lives in the other type, based on the Model K layout used on the blocks page.
IEE-Q 's Leading-Core pair → EIE-Q 's block
EIE-Q 's Leading-Core pair → IEE-Q 's block
Quasi-Identity — Actual Combinations
Type pairs that fall under this relationship (total 16 pairs). Click to reflect in the checker.
































Check this relationship in practice
Select two types to see which relationship type applies
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
