Duty
Duty relationship
Strengths
Functioning in structured short-term collaboration · Reception of the situation's complexity
Weaknesses
Chronic conflict of "know but can't move" · Accumulation of approval anxiety · Suppression of autonomy
In the Duty relationship, the partner's presence induces the psychological state of "procrastination, psychological rigidity, anxious approval-seeking".
With the partner simply being themselves, a rigid sensation arises inside you — "I can sense the situation's complexity, yet I can only move obligatorily".Discomfort is eased from Role · Core (0.00) to 0.25, but this is closer to "conflict has increased because you can sense the situation more complexly".
The signature experience is procrastination: "I know what I should do, but I can't move".As a mechanism of conflict function, activation of Role · Adjustment suppresses resilience and disciple-learning (Learning · Adjustment, Value 0.75).
Under extrinsic obligation and approval anxiety, introspective growth-reception is difficult.Conversely, in contexts where Learning · Adjustment is activated — when the drive for autonomous learning arises — obligation and approval anxiety ease.
Key Points
- 01 The partner's presence induces procrastination, psychological rigidity, and anxious approval-seeking
- 02 Eased from Role · Core (0.00) to 0.25, but characterized by the complex conflict "know yet can't move"
- 03 Suppression of the conflict function (Learning · Adjustment / resilience): the stronger obligation, the more autonomous growth-reception is blocked
- 04 A relationship of "know yet can't be oneself" — no rejection, but chronic rigidity remains
- 05 In contexts where Learning · Adjustment is activated, obligation and approval anxiety may ease
⚠️ Cautions for Good Relationships
Duty is a relationship that functions in short-term, structured contexts — classes, meetings, seminars with clear time and purpose — where procrastination and rigidity fit the natural context. But brought into long-term close contact, friendship, or romance, the chronic conflict "know yet can't move" accumulates. When the partner is placed in an evaluative/instructive position (boss, mentor, coach), approval anxiety strengthens and exhaustion accelerates.
🔧 Improvements for Bad Relationships
When obligation and approval anxiety come to the fore, deliberately creating "equal contexts detached from evaluation" — shared hobbies, play, aimless chat — can temporarily ease rigidity. Accumulating "experiences of being approved" by the partner is the shortest path to recovering autonomous movement.
🔄 Reversal Conditions
Good → Bad
Emergence of power differential or evaluation relationship · shift to long-term close contact. Or when the partner starts engaging directly with your domain of expertise.
Bad → Good
When roles/authorities are clearly separated. When equal collaborative contexts without evaluation emerge. When you have clear experiences of approval/affirmation from the partner.
✅ Conscious Improvement
- Recognize "can't move" as structural and avoid self-criticism
- Consciously accumulate small autonomous actions to ease approval anxiety
- Shift expectation of the partner from "being approved" to "moving together"
- Narrow the engagement context to "settings with clear purpose and limited time"
Early
Early: Functions in structured settings and the relationship forms
Middle
Middle: As contact deepens, the "know yet can't move" sensation chronifies
Long-term
Long-term: Approval anxiety fixes and autonomous action within the relationship becomes difficult
Long-term Risks
- Decline of self-efficacy through chronic approval anxiety
- Formation of the fixed self-image "I can't use my strength with this person"
- Accumulation of self-criticism for being unable to move
⚠️ Warning Signs
- You obsess over the partner's evaluation/reaction
- Procrastination has increased even though you know what to do
- The need for the partner's approval has become excessive
Dialogue Style Characteristics
- Many reservations/preambles like "I understand, but" or "yes, but"
- Pre-execution confirmation/approval-seeking increases
- Tendency to speak cautiously while watching the partner's reaction
⚠️ Typical Misunderstandings
- Procrastination is misread as "unmotivated"
- Strong approval-seeking creates an impression of "lacking confidence"
- "Know yet can't move" is misread as "lack of ability"
👥 Role in the Team
Functions in structured short-term projects, but long-term close collaboration easily produces "know yet can't move" rigidity.
📋 Project Suitability
Functions only in short-term projects with clear deadlines and goals. Approval anxiety comes to the fore in contexts involving evaluation.
🏢 Hiring / HR Considerations
Care is needed in placements involving evaluation/assessment. Clarify roles/expectations and design an environment minimizing approval anxiety.
Impact on Mental Health
Chronification of approval anxiety and procrastination lowers long-term autonomy and self-efficacy. The repeated experience "know yet can't move" carries a risk of self-criticism.
Growth Potential
There is secondary growth in capacity to handle approval anxiety. True autonomous growth is structurally obstructed, so complementary growth in other relationships is needed.
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.
Support 1
Deeply fulfills ILE-Q and creates psychological latitude.
Support 2
Deeply fulfills IEE-D and eases obligation and approval anxiety.
※ The following description is written from the perspective of the base type "ILE-Q (Explorer)"
In the Duty pair (ILE-Q + IEE-D), there is no common third party that structurally benefits both at the same time. Each partner's dual type functions as an individual secure base. ILE-Q's cravings are deeply fulfilled by SEI-D, and in the fulfilled state obligatory reactions to the partner fade, and the rigidity of "know yet can't move" eases. IEE-D is deeply fulfilled by SLI-Q, and in the fulfilled state approval anxiety and procrastination are structurally reduced. Each partner's separate contact with their dual type raises tolerance to the chronic conflict in the Duty relationship. Note: SEI-D and SLI-Q are themselves in a Duty 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.
ILI-D 's Leading-Core pair → IEI-Q 's block
IEI-Q 's Leading-Core pair → ILI-D 's block
Duty — 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
※ Compatibility data is described using ILE-Q (Explorer) as the base type
