TEG-Blue · The Emotional Gradient Blueprint
The Nervous System Gradient
TEG-Blue is a visual map of how nervous-system state can shape emotion, perception, relationship, action, and repair.
The Nervous System Gradient brings established research together to show how these patterns may shift across safety, threat, control, shutdown, regulation, and repair.
It makes linked changes visible: what the body prepares for, what draws attention, what feels possible, how another person is perceived, and whether repair can begin. It is a map for studying patterns, not a diagnosis or a claim of certainty about motive.
How to read the acute Gradient
Seven recurring patterns emerge
We don’t stay the same person in every situation. Sometimes we’re open and kind. Other times we’re guarded, distant, or even controlling.
These shifts aren’t random—they follow a pattern in our nervous system. That’s why the same emotion—like anger, sadness, or joy—can feel completely different depending on the context.
When you zoom out on human behaviour, patterns start to emerge.
At first it looks chaotic—everyone reacting differently, every emotion shifting moment to moment. But with enough distance, seven recurring positions begin to appear.
Together, they show how emotional and nervous-system organisation may change as conditions are read as safe, uncertain, threatening, persistent, overwhelming, or beyond available capacity.
Baseline — Restorative ground. Rest, digestion, recovery, and replenishment are available.
Connection / Belonging — Non-defensive engagement. Presence, empathy, mutuality, and social connection are available.
Safety Checking — Safety or belonging is uncertain. Defensive organisation begins by checking what changed.
Protection / Defence — Immediate threat. Fight, flight, guarding, defence, or appeasement move forward.
Strategic Management — Persistent threat. Cognition organises around prediction, management, and control of variables.
Power Mobilisation — Maximum protection. Force, power, and outcome become primary while empathy and impact may narrow.
Shutdown — Capacity exceeded. Mobilisation drops and conservation, withdrawal, or collapse become primary.
Movement can happen quickly and may update as conditions change. These positions describe patterns—not fixed identities or diagnoses, or proof of another person's hidden internal state.
Gradient Map
Move through the nervous-system Gradient.
Use the map to see how a shift in state changes what becomes available: body information, perception, emotion, empathy, repair, and the capacity to stay connected.
Connection / Belonging
also known as social engagement
Autonomic pathway parasympathetic · ventral vagal
Safety with others — social engagement and co-regulation are available.
Safety through connection
The field is wide enough to include another person as safe and separate. Facial expression, tone, timing, context, and shared meaning can be read without defensive narrowing.
Research on social perception, attachment, and co-regulation grounds this: safety with others keeps face, tone, timing, context, and shared meaning readable.
Chronic organisation
How chronic modes form
Chronic modes can develop when the body has to deal with danger, uncertainty, or overwhelm repeatedly or for a long time.
This can begin in childhood when care or safety is frightening, absent, inconsistent, or unpredictable. It can also develop later in life through repeated threat or prolonged stress without enough rest, support, or recovery.
Conditions that can contribute
- Unsafe or unpredictable conditions during development.
- Repeated threat, neglect, coercion, instability, loss, or overwhelm.
- Prolonged stress with too little rest, safety, support, or recovery.
When protection is needed again and again, watchfulness, appeasement, control, force, or shutdown can become easier to reach than rest, open connection, or a flexible response.
In chronic mode, every position is defensive. A person may look calm or connected while their body is still bracing, monitoring, pleasing, managing, or conserving energy. Shutdown can be reached from any chronic position.
Knowing how a chronic mode formed does not erase its effects. The practical questions remain: can impact be named, can another person's reality stay present, can responsibility be taken, and can the pattern change?
What the gradient explains
From state shifts to relationship patterns
The Gradient connects changes that are often considered separately. It helps a reader examine what the body is preparing for, how attention and emotion change, what happens between people, and what conditions may allow repair—while keeping impact, accountability, and boundaries in view.
Emotion as information — feelings can signal body state, need, boundary, impact, or repair without becoming automatic fact.
Why care is not always enough — under threat, empathy and repair can narrow even when care is present.
How rupture repeats — a short-term shift can become a familiar pattern of distance, defence, withdrawal, or pressure for certainty.
How protection can become control — repeated protection may organize around managing, testing, pursuing, avoiding, or overriding another person's options.
What repair requires — repair depends on enough capacity for impact, empathy, accountability, boundary, and changed pattern to become available.
Research
What research supports—and where its limits are
TEG-Blue organizes existing research into a visual framework. Established science grounds specific parts of the map; no single source is treated as proof of the whole architecture.
Each part of the map is checked separately: body state, perception, thinking, activation, emotion, access to other people, action, repeated patterns, and repair.
Mode
how the pattern feels and presents in lived experience.
State
how the nervous system is organizing attention, energy, and response.
Configuration
how mode and state appear together, either as a short-term shift or a pattern that keeps returning.
Gradient and autonomic state
Autonomic neuroscience, neuroception, and stress physiology ground the safety-threat axis, mobilisation, inhibition, chronic load, and return. · Porges · Sapolsky · McEwen
Perception and cognition
Cognitive science, appraisal research, attention, prediction, cognitive load, and state-shaped perception ground the narrowing or widening of the field. · Barrett · Kahneman · Bower
Awareness and body signals
Interoception and body-awareness research ground the way inner signals become available, muted, narrowed, or difficult to name. · A. D. Craig · contemplative research
Emotion and action readiness
Affective neuroscience and emotion science ground emotional salience, body signals, urgency, and action readiness. · Panksepp · Damasio · Barrett · LeDoux
Relationship and repair
Attachment, interpersonal neurobiology, trauma research, and developmental research ground proximity, rupture, protection, co-regulation, and repair. · Bowlby · Siegel · Levine · van der Kolk
Context and scale
Psychology, social psychology, sociology, and anthropology locate overlapping parts of the map without owning the whole architecture. · Contextual grounding
The Scientific Grounding page explains which research areas support each part of the map and where each claim stops. Read the scientific grounding.
Use and attribution
Authorship and use
TEG-Blue, The Emotional Gradient Blueprint, and The Nervous System Gradient were created by Anna Paretas-Artacho. Original public written framework content is published under CC BY 4.0: attribution is required, and reuse should link back to the source. View license.
Marks, logos, tools, code, Engine logic, product surfaces, and third-party materials are excluded unless otherwise noted. Applied builds, institutional implementation, product integration, and reuse of Engine or tool logic require written permission.
Questions
Common questions
What is TEG-Blue?
TEG-Blue is The Emotional Gradient Blueprint: a research-grounded visual framework for reading how emotional, nervous-system, relational, and repair patterns form and change.
What is the Nervous System Gradient?
The Nervous System Gradient is the current central public map inside TEG-Blue: a visual map of how emotional, bodily, and relational patterns shift across safety, threat, control, shutdown, regulation, and repair.
What does the Gradient help readers notice?
It helps readers notice how a state can shape perception, emotion, body activation, behaviour, empathy, accountability, and repair capacity without turning a visible pattern into diagnosis or motive certainty.
What is the difference between a passing state and a chronic one?
Some protective states move. Other protective patterns become repeated, rigid, or hard to leave. This distinction helps read patterns over time; it is not a public typology or a verdict about a person.
What research is TEG-Blue grounded in?
TEG-Blue organizes established research into a visual framework. Sources ground specific parts of the map; no single source is treated as proof of the whole architecture.
Can TEG-Blue diagnose people?
No. TEG-Blue is educational and reflective. It can help read observable patterns, effects, boundaries, and repair needs, but it cannot identify someone's true internal state from the outside.