Your Life Systems Triage Results
Twelve domains, scored from your actual answers. One of them is costing you more than the others right now -- here's which one, and what to do about it in the next 24 hours.
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Your Three Pillars
Every domain you answered questions about falls into one of three functional pillars. This is the highest-level view of where your systems currently stand.
Pillar scores describe function, not priority. The domain-level breakdown below is what determines where you actually start.
Your Systems Map
Each spoke is one of your twelve domains. The dashed ring marks your Deadband — the Steady Zone: this is the threshold a domain needs to clear to be considered stable rather than chaotic. A point inside the dashed ring means that system is currently running outside its deadband and reacting to every disturbance instead of absorbing it. The shape itself matters as much as any single point. A smooth, even shape close to or beyond the ring is the goal, not a single tall spike.
Your Domain Scorecard
Your primary gap is the domain costing you the most right now, accounting for both your own answers and how that gap is documented to affect related systems.
Where to Focus First
Your primary gap above is where the engineering process says to start. These are your next three highest-priority domains worth knowing about now, even if you address them later. The first is something to take action on in the next 24 hours.
Start with your primary gap
Open a blank document and write three sentences about your primary gap domain: what it's currently doing, what you want it to do, and the smallest change you could make this week.
How Your Systems Are Connected
Your domain scores are not independent. When one system is in a Critical Gap, documented research shows it measurably suppresses your capacity in specific related systems, even if you answered well on that related system's own questions. Here is what that looks like in your actual results.