A structured self-report formulation aid to help identify patterns of perceived trust strain, relational uncertainty, boundaries, and communication concern.
Please read this policy carefully before starting. This is a structured self-report reflective tool and formulation aid, not a forensic or clinical diagnostic system.
Length & Distress Notice: This standard version contains 60 items. Completing it may require substantial reflection and could feel demanding or emotionally sensitive, particularly during times of distress. If you feel overwhelmed, stop and seek appropriate support.
This document is not a forensic report, expert report, legal document, clinical assessment, or proof of deception or wrongdoing. It is a self-report reflective summary only. It should not be used to confront, pressure, punish, monitor, or coerce another person.
Elevated trust vulnerability indicators may reflect previous betrayal experiences, attachment-related insecurity, relational anxiety, communication difficulties, ambiguity intolerance, unresolved relationship injury, or current relationship instability. These findings should not be interpreted as evidence of deception, infidelity, or wrongdoing.
This dual-construct display separates indicators of potential concealment (active secrecy or inconsistencies) from trust vulnerabilities (personal attachment patterns or trust sensitivities). These are independent dimensions.
Reflects the pattern of responses associated with trust strain, uncertainty, and perceived concealment concern.
Reflects internal relationship interpretation styles, attachment-related anxiety, emotional avoidance, or prior betrayal impact. This construct is non-diagnostic.
Professional Caution: This assessment evaluates patterns of concern, trust perception, concealment-related indicators, and relationship interpretation styles. It cannot establish factual deception, infidelity, or concealed behaviour. Findings should be interpreted cautiously within broader relational and contextual factors.