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Should I Stay
or Should I Leave?

"The most dangerous action in a relationship is prolonged indecision. It drains the vitality of both partners and prevents any meaningful repair."

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Stay or Leave Evaluation

A clinical-grade screening to determine if your relationship is in a repairable crisis or structural failure.

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The Agony of Maybe

In the architecture of clinical psychology, **Ambivalence** is considered one of the most emotionally taxing states a human can endure. When you are 'on the fence' about your relationship, your brain is in a state of chronic hyper-vigilance, constantly scanning for reasons to save the bond or reasons to escape it.

At TruAlign, we believe that the decision to stay or leave should not be based on 'feelings'—which fluctuate daily—but on **Structural Data**. We provide a 3-step clarity model designed to move you from emotional alarm to architectural clarity.

The Threshold of Betrayal

Mira Kirshenbaum, author of 'Too Good to Leave, Too Bad to Stay,' suggests that the key to clarity is identifying 'Deal-Breakers' that override all other considerations. If the relationship contains physical danger, chronic infidelity with no repair, or a fundamental refusal to acknowledge reality, the structural integrity is already gone. At that point, 'staying' is not an act of love, but an act of self-erosion.
Mira Kirshenbaum, Too Good to Leave, Too Bad to Stay

Step 1: The Integrity Audit

Before looking at the partner, you must look at the **Substrate of the Bond**. A relationship can survive almost anything except the absence of three core pillars:

Shared Reality: Do you both agree on what the problems actually are? Without shared reality, repair is impossible.
Basic Respect: Is there a baseline of courtesy even during conflict? The presence of contempt is a clinical signal of structural death.
Repair Capacity: When something goes wrong, can you both move back toward each other?

The Decision Pivot

Terry Real's research indicates that the decision to leave is rarely about a single event, but a 'milestone of resignation.' Identifying these milestones early allows for either a precision repair attempt or a dignified exit. Staying in the 'Agony of Maybe' for years leads to what therapists call 'The Long Goodbye,' where the bond is dead long before the physical exit occurs.
Terry Real, Relational Life Therapy

Step 2: Assessing the Cost of Repair

Every relationship problem has a 'Cost of Repair.' Some problems cost an apology and a change in behavior. Others cost years of intense therapy and a complete reconstruction of trust.

You must ask: **"Am I willing and able to pay the price of the repair required?"** This is a clinical question of capacity, not a moral question of love.

Step 3: The Data-Driven Decision

Once you have conducted the audit and assessed the cost, the 'Maybe' disappears. You are either in a relationship that is **Repairable** (with a clear path forward) or you are in a relationship that is **Structurally Failed** (with a clear path out).

Clarity Gate Diagnostic

End the agony of indecision. Our 15-minute diagnostic tool helps you categorize your relationship viability using evidence-based clinical markers.

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