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Diagnostic Article

Should I Stay? The Viability Quadrant

Stop circling the same question. If you are wondering if your relationship is beyond repair, move from "emotional oscillation" to "decisive data" using a clinical framework.

AI Clinical Summary

"The 'Should I Stay' question is often paralyzing because we look at the wrong data. We look at history or feelings. Clinically, viability is determined by Repair Capacity and Structural Safety. If the capacity to repair is zero, the relationship is already in the 'Collapse Quadrant,' regardless of how much love remains."

Why This Guide Exists

Purpose: To provide a objective decision-making framework for partners in high-ambivalence states.

Who it helps: Readers who have been asking 'Is it over?' for months or years and feel stuck in a loop of hope and disappointment.

What it clarifies: The 4 Quadrants of Viability and how to identify your current location on the map.

Clinical baseline: Ambivalence (the 'Should I Stay' loop) is the primary driver of relationship-related depression and anxiety.

1. The Viability Quadrant

Determining if when it is truly over requires evaluating two axes: Mutual Desire for Repair and Structural Health.

High Health / High Desire

The Repairable Zone

The core structure is intact. Problems are 'Software' issues. High probability of success through coaching/therapy.

Low Health / Low Desire

The Collapse Zone

The structure is broken and neither partner is willing to do the hard work of rebuilding. Higher probability of recovery *after* exit.

Low Health / High Desire

The Rebuilding Zone

The structure is broken but both partners are 'All-In.' This requires a radical 'Structural Reset' and heavy intervention.

High Health / Low Desire

The 'Good Roommate' Zone

The structure is functional but the 'Affective Bond' is gone. High risk for resentment or outside affairs.

Not Sure If This Is Temporary — or Structural?

Take the 5-minute Clarity Gate assessment to determine whether your relationship is experiencing conflict — or crisis.

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2. The 3 Structural Dealbreakers

If any of these three things are present without proactive, clinical intervention, the decision is effectively made:

01.

Active Abuse

Any pattern of physical or psychological coercion where the goal is control, not connection.

02.

Chronic Contempt

When the fundamental baseline of the relationship has shifted from respect to disgust.

03.

Unilateral Disengagement

When one partner has mentally 'exited' and refuses to engage in any form of repair or growth.

3. The Anti-Loop Protocol

Deciding whether to stay requires a Limited-Time Sprint.

The 90-Day Viability Sprint

If you are paralyzed, commit to a 90-day period of full engagement. If at the end of 90 days of consistent effort—from both sides—the needle has not moved, you have your answer. Hope is not a strategy; data is.
Standard of Care in Marriage Counseling

Identify Your Quadrant.

Are you in the Repairable Zone or the Collapse Zone? Use the Stability Threshold tool to map your relationship on the Viability Quadrant.

Decision Support FAQ

How do I know if I've tried hard enough?
Clinically, 'trying enough' occurs when you have consistently communicated your needs, attempted behavioral changes, and utilized professional or structural support, but the core patterns of the relationship remain unchanged. If you feel 'Self-Erosion' starting to occur, you have reached the limit of healthy effort.
What if I still love my partner but I'm miserable?
Love is a 'Software' component; compatibility and respect are 'Hardware.' You can love someone deeply and still be in a structurally non-viable relationship. Decisions should be based on the relationship's *Structure*, not just the *Feeling* of love.
Is it okay to stay for the sake of the children?
Research shows that children often fare better in two healthy households than in one high-conflict or emotionally dead household. The 'Atmosphere' of the relationship is what the children internalize as the blueprint for love.
T

Adam Hall, DO — Founder & Framework Architect

Adam Hall, DO is the founder of TruAlign, a structured relational diagnostic platform designed to help individuals and couples identify structural instability before making high-stakes decisions.

With a background in medicine and clinical decision-making, Dr. Hall applies principles of triage, pattern recognition, and structured assessment to relational systems. TruAlign translates diagnostic clarity — commonly used in medical settings — into the relationship domain.

TruAlign assessments are educational decision-support tools and do not replace professional medical, psychological, or therapeutic care.

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