TruAlign

Examples

Chapter 27: From Relief to Growth: Building Durable Love

Scenarios & Examples

Scenario 1: Feeling Lonely on Tuesday Night

Relief Response:

  • Action: Swipe on dating apps for 2 hours. Text an old fling.
  • Goal: Stop the loneliness immediately.
  • Result: Temporary fix. You wake up feeling empty. Fragility reinforced.

Growth Response:

  • Action: Put the phone away. Sit with the loneliness. Feel where it is in your body. Read a book or cook a meal while feeling lonely.
  • Goal: Build the capacity to be alone without crumbling.
  • Result: You prove to yourself you are safe. Durability increased.

Scenario 2: Receiving Critical Feedback at Work

Relief Response:

  • Action: Get defensive. Blame the boss. Complain to coworkers.
  • Goal: Protect the ego.

Growth Response:

  • Action: Take a breath. "Thank you for the feedback. Let me process that." Ask clarifying questions to improve.
  • Goal: Improve competence.

Scenario 3: The Ex Reaches Out (Breadcrumb)

Relief Response:

  • Action: Reply instantly. "Omg hey! I miss you!"
  • Goal: Get the dopamine hit. End the uncertainty.

Growth Response:

  • Action: Pause. Ask: "Does this message meet my new standard?" If not, wait. Or reply calmly.
  • Goal: Maintain dignity. Teach them how to treat you.

Scenario 4: A Friend Cancels Plans

Relief Response:

  • Action: "Whatever. No one cares about me." Spiral into victimhood.

Growth Response:

  • Action: "Bummer. Okay, I'm going to take myself to the movie instead."
  • Goal: Practice adaptability.

The Pattern

  • Relief reinforces dependency (on others, on substances, on validation).
  • Growth reinforces sovereignty (self-reliance, skill, choice).

Scenario 5: Social Media Comparison

Relief Response: Scroll, compare, spiral.
Growth Response: Close the app and do one concrete growth action.


: Research TODO: Add citations on coping styles and resilience outcomes.


Clinical & Research Foundations

This chapter integrates findings from peer-reviewed psychiatry, psychology, and relationship science, including attachment theory, trauma research, sexual health medicine, and evidence-based couples therapy.

Research & Clinical Sources

Key Sources

  • Gottman, J. M., & Levenson, R. W. (2000). The timing of divorce. Journal of Family Psychology, 14(1), 5–22. https://doi.org/10.1037/0893-3200.14.1.5
  • Mikulincer, M., & Shaver, P. R. (2007). Attachment in Adulthood. https://doi.org/10.1037/11435-000
  • Herman, J. L. (1992). Trauma and Recovery. Basic Books.
  • Ten Brinke, L., et al. (2016). Moral psychology of dishonesty. Psychological Science, 27(1), 2–14.
  • Christensen, A., et al. (2010). Integrative Behavioral Couple Therapy. JCCP, 78(2), 193–204.