Most frameworks point outward. This one points in the right direction.
The Attachment in Motion Model is a complete architecture for understanding where the nervous system learned to source its safety, what it builds when that source is external, and what it actually takes to move the source inside. It does not describe symptoms. It does not assign blame. It maps the mechanism underneath all of it.
Every framework in this model is answering one question from a different angle.
Where is this person's nervous system getting its safety from?
When the source is external, borrowed from people, roles, achievement, systems, or belief, everything downstream is unstable. The patterns persist. The reach continues. The loops run. Until the source changes.
The Attachment in Motion Model rests on a single principle.
Any system under pressure will select the fastest available path to stability with the lowest perceived cost, and reuse it, even when better outcomes exist.
Every layer in this model is an expression of that constraint. Borrowed safety forms because external regulation is faster. Identity patterns persist because they are precomputed stability strategies. State-driven behaviors execute because they stabilize before cognition can intervene. Relational patterns repeat because familiarity regulates faster than novelty.
This is not one part of the system. This is why the system behaves at all.
This model is not five ideas. It is one law, expressed five different ways.
Read the full Fastest Stability PrincipleFive layers. One question.
Each layer depends on the one beneath it. Each one answers a more specific version of the same question.
The Self-Attachment Framework
The foundational capacity that makes everything else possible. Not a skill. The prerequisite architecture. Nothing stabilizes without it.
The axiom explains why: staying is slow, so exit becomes default.
Read the full frameworkThe Borrowed Safety Model
Maps the degree to which safety is externally sourced. Measures five dimensions of regulatory dependency. Tracks the path from borrowed safety to embodied safety.
The axiom explains why: external sources regulate faster, so dependency forms.
Read the full frameworkThe Identity Pattern Framework
Ten core survival identity patterns. Each one a coherent regulatory strategy the nervous system organized around when authentic selfhood was dangerous or unavailable.
The axiom explains why: identity is precomputed regulation. The fastest path the system ever found, installed permanently.
The State-Driven Attachment Model
Signal. State. Strategy. What gets called attachment style is not a fixed identity. It is the live output of a system reading the room and responding.
The axiom explains why: fast execution beats reflective choice, every time.
Read the full frameworkThe Relational Imprint Model
The nervous system does not just seek familiar environments. It reconstructs them. This model maps why safe feels like nothing and why the familiar keeps winning.
The axiom explains why: familiar environments are faster to regulate than unknown ones.
Read the full frameworkTwo mechanisms and one translation layer explain why patterns persist even after awareness arrives.
The Containment Loop
Why external systems, religion, coaching, therapy, can capture the reach and make the wound invisible. Shame is the enforcement mechanism. Recommitment feels like faithfulness. The loop is self-sustaining.
Read the full frameworkThe Activation Loop
The real-time cycle inside a single interaction. Signal, state, strategy, relational response, regulation outcome, identity reinforcement. This loop explains why you do the thing. The Containment Loop explains why you keep being the person who does the thing.
The Activation Loop is explained within the State-Driven Attachment Model rather than as a standalone canonical document.
The Spiritual Translation Layer
A parallel interpretive overlay mapping what mystics noticed, what religion institutionalized, and what is actually happening in the nervous system underneath all of it.
Read the full frameworkBoth loops obey the governing axiom. They persist because they are fast and reliable. Speed is the reason they close.
What becomes possible.
For you personally
You stop trying to fix behavior that is being generated by physiology. You see the system, not just the symptoms. You understand why insight alone has not been enough.
For couples
Two people can see, for the first time, that the friction between them is not about character. It is two regulatory systems colliding. Both solving for safety. Neither wrong.
For clinicians and practitioners
A framework precise enough to map what is actually running before you intervene. Not a typology. Not a symptom checklist. A system-level read.
For organizations
The same patterns that run in relationships run in teams. The system is the spine.
The memoir is the origin story. The assessment is the entry point. The frameworks are the map.