TEG-Blue · The Emotional Gradient Blueprint

The Nervous System Gradient

We do not stay the same in every situation — open and trusting one moment, guarded or controlling the next. These shifts are not random. They are state changes in the nervous system.

The body keeps reading one question — is it safe, or is there danger? — faster than thought. Its answer lands the whole system on one line: rest and connection at the safe end, defence and control as threat rises, and shutdown when mobilisation cannot form.

XSafe & at rest
ASafe with others
A↔BIs it still safe?
BThreat
CBigger threat
DLife threat
ZShutdown

What the gradient is

A continuous range of nervous-system organisation.

The gradient maps how the nervous system organises as it reads safety, threat, and whether rest is possible. This is a live state map: where the system is configured it changes what the whole person can perceive, feel, think, do, and repair.

Rest + connectionDefence + shutdown
Reads

Safety, threat, and rest

The body is continually scanning the room: is this safe, is there a threat, can I connect with others?

Moves

Fluid state shifts

The nervous system moves fluidly across the gradient: some state shifts happen in milliseconds, others unfold across days or months.

Organises

The whole organism

Wherever the system reorganises, body, mind, emotion, behaviour, perception, and repair capacity shift around that state.

Hardens

When threat lasts

With prolonged threat, patterns can become chronic: scanning for danger even when the present moment is safe.

4-Mode Gradient · Acute Connection

4-Mode Gradient — the same readout simplified to Acute Connection, then Chronic Defence, Chronic Control, and Chronic Domination.

AConnection / Belonging

Acute Connection

also known as social engagement

autonomic state — parasympathetic · ventral vagal

State A · acute · safety → reciprocity

Safety with others — social engagement and co-regulation are available.

Safety through connection

PerceptionWide, tilted toward faces and people
What this means

The state sets the filter on the world: in safety, the whole situation can be taken in; under threat, attention selects for what matters to protection, risk, escape, or control.

Grounding science

Cognitive Science — state-dependent perception (Barrett, Kahneman) + neuroception

What the gradient explains

From personal patterns to societal systems

The same shape can be read from one nervous system to families, institutions, and whole groups. It helps explain how harm forms without excusing the harm.

  • Why care is not always enoughunder threat, empathy narrows even when intent is good.

  • How harm can become normalwhen empathy stays offline for too long, the cost to others stops being fully registered.

  • How defence hardens into controlrepeated protection can become rule, punishment, exclusion, or system logic.

  • Language for shifts as they happenrecognised as state changes without reducing people to character.

  • A route back to connectionrepair begins with the state the system is actually in, and with enough safety for empathy to return.

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The map

The seven states, in order

One continuum, from physiological baseline through social engagement, protection, control, domination, and shutdown. Each state is a whole-system configuration: when the state changes, perception, cognition, awareness, empathy, action, and repair change with it.

  1. XBaseline

    Safe & at rest · SAFETY · rest-and-digest · parasympathetic

    Physiological baseline — restoration and broad capacity are available.

    ChronicElevated baseline — restoration does not fully complete

  2. AConnection / Belonging

    Safe with others · SAFETY · social engagement · parasympathetic · ventral vagal

    Safety with others — social engagement and co-regulation are available.

    ChronicConnection / Belonging — safety is displayed without full access

  3. A↔BSafety Checking

    Is it still safe? · UNCERTAINTY · parasympathetic → sympathetic

    Relational uncertainty — the system checks whether safety still holds.

    ChronicSafety Checking — the safety question remains unresolved

  4. BProtection / Defence

    Threat · THREAT · fight · flight · fawn · sympathetic

    Threat — mobilisation prioritises boundary, distance, or defence.

    ChronicProtection / Defence — mobilisation stays held

  5. CControl / Management

    Bigger threat · BIGGER THREAT · cognitive control / management · sympathetic + vagal brake

    Sustained threat — cognition organises around management and control.

    ChronicControl / Management — management becomes the regulation route

  6. DDomination

    Life threat · LIFE THREAT · power mobilisation · sympathetic

    Life threat — power mobilisation overrides relational access.

    ChronicDomination — power becomes the regulation route

  7. ZShutdown

    Shutdown · SHUTDOWN · freeze · collapse · parasympathetic · dorsal vagal

    Overwhelm — mobilisation drops and conservation becomes primary.

    ChronicPersistent Shutdown — collapse becomes the running organisation

Grounding

Research grounding and source traces

The architecture leads, and the public framework shows where established research converges withspecific parts of the map. These are source traces and grounding points, not a claim that the whole system has clinical validation.

The gradient / autonomic hierarchy

Polyvagal Theory — autonomic hierarchy and neuroception · Porges

State / activation

Polyvagal Theory (three states) + Stress Physiology · Porges · Sapolsky · McEwen

Perception

Cognitive Science — state-dependent perception + neuroception · Barrett · Kahneman

Cognition

Cognitive Science — cognitive load, state-dependent · Bower · Kahneman · Barrett

Self-awareness

Interoception — internal signalling and the sense of self · A. D. Craig

Empathy

Interpersonal Neurobiology + Polyvagal social engagement · Siegel · Porges

Body / activation

Stress Physiology — acute activation → allostatic load · Sapolsky · McEwen

Time horizon

Cognitive Science + Stress Physiology (threat compresses the horizon) · Kahneman · Sapolsky

Emotions / signals

Affective Neuroscience + Emotion Science · Panksepp · Damasio · Barrett · LeDoux

Behaviour / response

Polyvagal (mobilise / immobilise) + Trauma Research · Porges · Levine · van der Kolk

Repair

Trauma Research (completion of defence) + Attachment (co-regulation) · Levine · van der Kolk · Bowlby

Rush / tempo

Tachypsychia + hurry sickness / hyperarousal · Stress Physiology · Cognitive Science

Use and attribution

Authorship and use

TEG-Blue and The Nervous System Gradient were created by Anna Paretas-Artacho. Public framework content is published under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0: attribution is required, use must be non-commercial, and adaptations must be shared under the same license. View license.

Commercial, institutional, product, model, or dataset integration requires explicit permission or a separate license.

Questions

Common questions

What is TEG-Blue?

TEG-Blue is The Emotional Gradient Blueprint: a layered visual framework that maps how emotions, nervous systems, survival strategies, identity, and social patterns form and evolve. Its current public center is the Nervous System Gradient.

What is the Nervous System Gradient?

The Nervous System Gradient is a map of the nervous system’s states. The nervous system continuously appraises one question — is it safe, or is there danger? — faster than conscious thought, and shifts the whole organism into the state that fits what it found, along a single continuum from rest, through connection and the defences, down to shutdown.

How does the nervous system choose a state?

Through neuroception — a continuous, pre-conscious read of safety versus danger. Based on that read, the system organises itself into one of seven ordered states: X, A, A↔B, B, C, D, and Z. Each state is a complete configuration of perception, cognition, the body, feeling, and behaviour — not a mood.

What is the difference between a passing state and a chronic one?

Each position is a passing response the system is built to move through and leave (acute). When a position cannot be left, it stops being a passing response and hardens into the default (chronic). The chronic reading shows restriction, repetition and substitute routing — it describes a system that cannot leave a state, never a verdict about a person.

What research is the Nervous System Gradient grounded in?

The architecture leads; established research provides grounding for specific claims. The gradient’s autonomic hierarchy draws from Polyvagal Theory (Porges); activation and chronic load from Stress Physiology (Sapolsky, McEwen); state-dependent perception and cognition from Cognitive Science (Barrett, Kahneman); interoception from A. D. Craig; empathy from Interpersonal Neurobiology (Siegel); emotions from Affective Neuroscience (Panksepp, Damasio, LeDoux); defence and repair from Trauma Research (Levine, van der Kolk) and Attachment (Bowlby).

What are fight, flight, fawn and freeze?

They are familiar names for points on the gradient. Fight, flight and fawn are defensive expressions of Protection (mobilised self-protection under threat). Freeze and collapse are Shutdown (the system conserves when mobilisation cannot form). Rest-and-digest is Baseline; social engagement is Connection.