Welcome to the Townsend Personal and Relational Assessment Tool

This survey addresses your personal and relational abilities, which connect strongly to your personal and professional lives. We will provide you with specific skills to help you take your abilities to the next level.

Takes less than 10 Minutes

Instructions

There are 20 questions

Responses range from “Strongly Disagree” to “Strongly Agree” and “Very False” to “Very True”.

Be as honest with yourself as possible

Most of us tend to err on the positive side about ourselves, so try to stay with what is true and real about you.

Go with your first “gut” response

Do not overthink your answers.

Takes less than 10 Minutes

INTRODUCTION

Taking the inventory

Engaging in the Skills

Growth Recommendations

Life Capacity #1: Attachment

Life Capacity #2: Separation

Life Capacity #3: Integration

Life Capacity #4: Adulthood

List of Emotions

 Acknowledgments

Introduction

Congratulations on taking the right steps to unlock your life potential!

As you take this easy-to-use tool, formulated from neuroscience, performance research, clinical findings and many other sources, the TPRAT will help you determine your current proficiency level with the four “Life Capacities.” Life Capacities are abilities that make up your personal character. Character is defined as that set of capacities required to meet the demands of reality.

Life has a number of demands on us: how to conduct our relationships, marriage, dating, parenting, self-care, career and finances, for example. As we improve our character development via the four Life Capacities, we are more equipped for success in all aspects of our lives.

To further determine areas of self-improvement, we encourage you to engage in the targeted Growth Skills. With these tools, you will be able to generate a roadmap for reaching your next level.

The Life Capacities we measure are:

Attachment

The capacity to be open and vulnerable with others, and to elicit vulnerability and trust in others.

Separation

The capacity to be clear about what you are for and against, own your voice, say no when you need to, and confront effectively.

Integration

The capacity to deal well with the negative and difficult aspects of life, such as loss and failure. You are able to adapt to them, and grieve losses in healthy ways, without self-judgment or entitlement.

adulthood

The capacity to relate to others from a mutual adult stance, rather than a child, adolescent or parent stance, and also to find and follow your life purpose, developing your talents to accomplish this.

These Capacities are essential for emotional well-being, great relationships as well as family and vocational success.

Scores & levels

The TPRAT will give you a score for each Capacity that corresponds to a certain level of growth. In this way, you will have four scores, knowing where you stand in each Capacity, and where growth is needed. Here are the scores and levels:

Starting

A score of 0 – 24

Growing

A score of 25-54

Strengthening

A score of 55 – 84

Sustaining

A score of 85 – 100

Taking the Inventory

  1. There are 20 questions to answer with a range of 6 responses from “Strongly Disagree” to “Strongly Agree”
  2. Go with your first “blink” response; don’t overthink your answers.
  3. Be as honest with yourself as possible. Most of us tend to err on the positive side about ourselves, so try to stay with what is true and real about you. The TPRAT will be more helpful to you.
  4. Avoid extremely low answers or extremely high answers, unless this is absolutely true about you.
  5. It will also be helpful to have a few people who know you well take the TPRAT, keeping you in mind. People who understand us, and have experience with us, can help identify our blind spots.

Engaging in the Skills

In each level of each Life Capacity, you will see four Growth Skills, each of which are organized into specific categories, one skill per category, to help you improve and move to higher levels. Your brain grows and thrives on the right kinds of data, thoughts, conversations and experiences. Here are the categories that help it grow.

Key Information

A review of helpful facts and principles that we provide, which will inform you.

Personal Insight

A specific query to which you may respond by writing a paragraph or two, or a list of responses. Make sure you share these thoughts and experiences with a supportive person or group. This will make all the difference.

Growth Conversation

A specific talk with someone who is supportive of you, will be truthful with you, and is also interested in self-improvement. If the person is more skilled than you in this area, so much the better. Feel free to have the conversation with more than one person. We can’t overemphasize the benefits of asking a few friends and associates for their involvement and help in your self-improvement work in the TPRAT skills.

Stretching Experience

A new and better way to behave, talk, choose and relate.
So, for each score in each of the four “Life Capacities”, you will have four skills in which to develop. This gives you a total of 16 different targeted skills in your report.
This is not a comprehensive list of skills. There are any number of other possible exercises that a person can engage in to grow. However, these skills will accomplish a great deal to get you where you want to go. Ask a coach or mentor for additional skills to help you. Also, Hiding from Love by Dr. John Townsend (Zondervan Publishing, 1991) and Changes that Heal by Dr. Henry Cloud and Dr. John Townsend (Zondervan Publishing, 1990) contain some additional skills for the four Life Capacities.

Growth Recommendations

Where to start

The levels of the TPRAT are built on each other. That is, for a person to be Sustaining (a score of 85 to 100) in the Capacity of Boundaries, it helps a great deal for them to have accomplished what is necessary on the earlier levels of Starting (a score of 0 to 24), Growing (a score of 25 to 54) and Strengthening (a score of 55 to 84) in Boundaries. It will be worth your while to review all of the levels, to see if there is work to be done at an earlier level to help you move ahead.

Find Support

Neuroscience research teaches us that our brains operate better in the context of a relationship. In every area of life, we are better off connected than isolated. We recommend you ask a few people to help you in this process, not only in the “growth conversation” Growth Skill, but all four skill categories. Talk with them about all of these. We have found that having supportive individuals in your life will accelerate your rate of progress. We strongly suggest you invite trusted friends, mentors and coaches to help you in this process. Safe People by Dr. John Townsend and Dr. Henry Cloud (Zondervan Publishing, 1995) is a good resource to help you find the right individuals.

Practice often

Engage in the skills often, meaning several times a week, if at all possible. They weren’t designed to be “one and done.” Just like participating in a sport, learning to play a musical instrument or mastering a business skill, it’s all about repetition and practice.

Keep a Journal

Regular journaling will accelerate your growth as well. Whether you write in a physical journal or use a digital format, your mind will retain, change and use the information you record. Make this a habit, if not daily, at least three times a week.

Progress Takes Patience

Remember also that personal growth is an oven, not a microwave. Just as our bodies take time to get into shape and overcome deficits and injuries, our brains don’t change immediately. Be patient with yourself and think of these levels in a “lifetime of continuous improvement” way. We will always be working on some aspect of these skills. Depending on your situation, a particularly challenging level change may take months or even years. Don’t worry about it; just keep working on the areas. Investing in your growth and self-improvement will always pay off.

Life Capacity #1: Attachment

This area has to do with how developed you are in the area of personal attachments, both with others and with yourself. It encompasses how effectively and vulnerably you can relate, and how in touch you are with your emotions and needs, as well as with the vulnerabilities of others. Emotions and needs such as acceptance, validation of our experiences, encouragement and perspective are the critical keys to developing great relationships. Individuals with high levels of achievement in the Bonding Capacity find that they have a healthy set of people in their lives with whom they can connect on deep, sustained and meaningful levels.

Score Range of 0-24: Starting

The Starting level indicates that this is a new or even difficult arena of life for you. You may tend to be much more aware of your thoughts and opinions than you are your emotions and relational needs. You also may tend to have difficulty being vulnerable and trusting other people, and may tend to isolate from others. Don’t be discouraged; this is an indicator that you have a target growth area in which we will help you develop the right skills.

SKILLS

Key Information

Familiarize yourself with the lists of emotions provided in this manual. They will provide a framework and language for growing in Bonding.

Personal Insight

Write down a one-paragraph answer to the question, “What in my history might have made it difficult for me to identify and understand my own emotions and relational needs?”

Growth Conversation

Ask someone you trust to talk about their personal feelings (especially painful ones) and their own relational needs. Have them describe them for you in depth, so you can develop your mental template for what this is like.

Stretching experience

  1. Twice a week, journal what you felt (from the list of emotions) and what you might have needed from others. This also means to write less about what you thought and did, except as points of reference for the day.
  2. Expand your emotional repertoire beyond “happy” and “unhappy” to the more nuanced emotions we all have, using the list of emotions.

Score Range of 25-54: Growing

The Growing level indicates that you are aware of your internal world. You know what you feel at any given time, whether it be positive or negative. You also have an idea of what you need from others, to help you move along in life. However, bringing these matters to others in a satisfying way may have been difficult for you. You want to move toward the next level, which is the ability to express “who you are” to others in a way that creates fulfilling connections with other supportive and positive people.

SKILLS

Key Information

Personal Insight

Write a paragraph on what life experiences you may have had that influenced you away from bringing emotions and needs to relationships.

Growth Conversation

Have a conversation in which you bring a difficult emotion or relational need to the person, without them giving advice. Get their feedback on what it is like for them to have you become that open and vulnerable.

Stretching experience

In a conversation about your emotions and needs, take note of any reactions you have to deflect the other person’s acceptance and warmth. You may observe, for example, that you change the subject, or ask them about themselves, or think “I don’t deserve this.” Don’t worry about it; just realize that you are doing it. This observation will help you take in and experience the good the other person is offering you, and will become more natural over time.

Score Range of 55-84: Strengthening

The Strengthening level shows that you can bring your internal world to other people in a way that works for both of you. Without a great deal of anxiety or self-judgment, you can talk about your experience with others, and ask for what you need, and the conversation goes well for both of you. The skills below will help you move toward the next level, which is the ability to authentically understand the experiences and feelings of others in a mutual way.

SKILLS

Key Information

Personal Insight

Write your paragraph on three skills you learned that are helping you to hear others better, and at a deeper and more accurate level.

Growth Conversation

Talk to someone who you have found to be a great empathic listener, and ask them how they do what they do. Most people are happy to provide insights into this important skill.

Stretching experience

Practice with someone on simply actively listening well to their experience. It could be a 10-minute conversation, and it could be much longer. Let them know you are working on listening in your personal growth, and you need their help to learn this skill. Have them bring up a personal or professional challenge they are experiencing. Then, using the information from the recommended book section, the growth conversation, and any other sources, be there for them. Use eye contact, warmth, authenticity and supportive statements to help. After that, ask for their honest feedback on how the experience was from their perspective so that you can improve. This is more skill than art!

Score Range of 85-100: Sustaining

The Sustaining level indicates that you are comfortable in understanding others, and are receiving positive feedback from them in this ability. You readily “hit the bullseye” in helping others feel known and understood, and you feel you are helping them in this area. You are also comfortable when you are alone, having lots of internal security from the great experiences you have had with people who care deeply for you. Here are the skills to help you maintain your growth at this level.

SKILLS

Key Information

Personal Insight

Write a paragraph on what life experiences you may have had that influenced you away from bringing emotions and needs to relationships.

Growth Conversation

Talk with someone who has helped you develop in your relational life. Ask them what strengths and challenges they observe in you, to focus you on how you need to complete your toolbox in this area.

Stretching experience

Apply this skill in your normal everyday life, not in a “practicing” way, but in a real-life way. This might mean concentrating on bonding with your kids on their level, not yours; having conversations with your spouse or a dating relationship in which you enter their world and help draw them out; use opportunities at work to simply actively listen and tune in to people for a few minutes, instead of always giving them advice.

Life Capacity #2: Separation

The word “spearation” refers to the capacity to be one’s own person. People who have healthy boundaries not only care about others, but have made up their minds about who they are, what they want, and what they don’t want. They can set effective limits to maintain control over their life, time and energy. They have their voice. They take the initiative to go after what is important to them. They have structure and focus. And they know how to confront well when those conversations are necessary.

Score Range of 0-24: Starting

The Starting level indicates that you tend to “go along to get along” with others and avoid conflict. You care about others but can end up enabling them. You may have difficulty paying attention to your own needs, and not setting boundaries when you should. It may be difficult to have a “voice” and confront others. The skills below will help you grow in this area.

SKILLS

Key Information

Personal Insight

Write your paragraph on what happened in your life that influenced you away from having your self-definition, voice and clarity in your relationships.

Growth Conversation

Ask a trusted person who “gets it” about the benefits of being separate, how they experience your ability to define yourself, have a voice, say “no” and confront. Ask them to provide you with a word picture on how they would envision you as a person with good separateness. How would they describe the “you” as a healthy separate person?

Stretching experience

The next several personal or professional conversations you find yourself in, take note of how often you give up yourself, lose your voice, don’t disagree with or adapt to whatever they need you to be. Noticing how often you find yourself “people-pleasing” is a great incentive to help you change.

Score Range of 25-54: Growing

Individuals at the Growing level can both understand and experience where they begin and where they end. You have clarity about differentiating between the feelings and needs of others, and your own. You know what you like and dislike, and what you are “for” and “against.” However, it is often difficult for you to be honest with others when you need to tell them no, disappoint an expectation of theirs, or disagree. Improving these skills will help you grow in this arena.

SKILLS

Key Information

Personal Insight

Write your paragraph on the top three concerns or fears you have that have kept you from setting limits, being direct and being honest with others.

Growth Conversation

Bring your three Personal Insight concerns into a conversation with a trusted person, asking them how they themselves may have dealt with these fears.

Stretching experience

Say “no” in a respectful way, every day for a week. It can be about having a different opinion than a colleague on a work project, letting your spouse or date know that you aren’t available for a time they’d like to be with you, or telling a friend you don’t agree with their viewpoint on a cultural issue.

Score Range of 55-84: Strengthening

Those at the Srtengthening level can define and clarify themselves well in relationships. You can say “no” when you need to, and feel the freedom to be who you are, and have the efficacy to make needed changes. However, you have more difficulty taking the initiative to seek out someone with which to have a difficult conversation. The skills below will help you grow further in your development.

SKILLS

Key Information

Personal Insight

Write your paragraph on why it is harder for you to confront than to say “no,” and also the benefits of learning the skill of confronting competently.

Growth Conversation

Role-play a confrontational conversation with a supportive person. Have your friend play an actual person in your life with whom you’re having problems saying “no.” Practice your newly learned skills. You and your friend can then talk about how it went, and how you can keep improving.

Stretching experience

Confront someone respectfully, twice in a week. It might be someone in your personal life who has behavior that you find difficult or hurtful. It might be someone at work whose attitude negatively affects performance. It just might be someone you want to straighten out a problem with so that you can resume the friendship.

Score Range of 85-100: Sustaining

People at the Sustaining level are “secure in their skin.” You can shift from “no” to “yes” with ease and without stress. When others ask you to invest your time, energy and resources to help them in some way, and you choose to do so, you do it freely and without fear, resentment or guilt. You also take the initiative to pursue your interests and goals without feeling selfish. The skills below will help you maintain this level of growth.

SKILLS

Key Information

Personal Insight

Write your paragraph on how you will NEVER go back to a life of fear, compliance and enabling!

Growth Conversation

Talk to a supportive person about what they have noticed in your growth, and what they like about this part of you, even the “truth-telling” part. It is a sign of a healthy person that they appreciate your boundaries, and don’t resent you for them.

Stretching experience

Put yourself in a normally difficult context in your work or personal life. For example, perhaps someone who constantly controls the conversation, or persists in asking you for time and energy you don’t have, or someone who is constantly critical of you, or trying to fix you. Instead of avoiding that person, let them do whatever they do (as long as they aren’t dangerous) and then just say, “Sorry, that doesn’t work for me” or “I need to let you know that the way you’re talking to me isn’t OK with me,” and go ahead and have the conversation. Be kind, but hold on firmly to your boundaries. It will truly be a “stretch,” but you will come away more confident because you have dealt well with an important Boundary Buster in your life.

Life Capacity #3: Integration

Life is full of positive aspects, such as love, happiness and fulfillment. Unfortunately, it is also full of negatives, such as failure, loss and mistreatment by others. Successful people have a positive attitude, but at the same time, they never avoid the negative realities of life either. The Life Capacity of Reality helps people be aware that if they deny or avoid the negative, life gets worse, not better. They don’t get stuck in self-judgment or perfectionism. They adapt to difficulties, and know how to grieve losses in healthy ways. They give up all attitudes of entitlement. People with this Capacity know how to think, how to feel and what to do, to learn and grow from the hardships of life.

Score Range of 0-24: Starting

Those at the Starting level often have trouble dealing with the three fundamental negative realities: failure, losses and mistreatment. You know these things are real and have happened to you, but you have not been given adequate skills to resolve them. As a consequence, you may struggle with perfectionism, feeling overwhelmed in difficulty, or avoidance of the negative altogether. The skills below will help you achieve a better level of growth in this area.

SKILLS

Key Information

Personal Insight

Write your paragraph on what happened in your life that influenced you away from having your self-definition, voice and clarity in your relationships.

Growth Conversation

Ask someone whom you believe deals well with the negatives in life without dismissing them, and, if they can be vulnerable about this, how they deal with them.

Stretching experience

In this more “stretching” conversation, talk to a supportive person about your list of negative realities. Tell them how you believe they may have impacted your life. Then ask them to give you feedback on how they think and feel about you, knowing what they now know about you. You must use care and discretion with whomever you choose for this conversation, as it must be safe and confidential, with no judgment whatsoever.

Score Range of 25-54: Growing

The Growing score level indicates that you can face, admit, and identify the significant negative realities in your life, without either minimizing or being disrupted by, the objective facts of these experiences. You are also aware of how the negatives impacted your life. This is a major step in this Life Capacity. The skills below will help you move on to the next level.

SKILLS

Key Information

Personal Insight

In your paragraph, write a list of the following key terms that describe ineffective coping styles to negative realities:

  • Denial: Simply disbelieving something is real
  • Minimizing: Taking the attitude that it was not all that bad
  • Working harder: Staying busy to stay away from the pain
  • Self-judgment and self-shaming: Being harsh with yourself about the situation
  • Blame: Staying stuck in seeing only the other’s part in the issue
  • Entitlement: Seeing oneself as deserving special treatment and privileges

Note which of these you tend to use habitually. Write also about how they have failed you in happiness, relationships or work.

Growth Conversation

Talk to a supportive person about these coping styles and ask them which of them they have also defaulted toward, and how they have grown past them.

Stretching experience

Role-play with someone, the coping styles you have used with negative realities. Set up a mock conversation about failure, loss or mistreatment. Simply have the other person play a friend who has heard about your difficult situation, and is concerned and asking you how you are doing. Then enact the style. For example, if you tend toward minimization, have your friend say, “I’m so sorry you were laid off. I know with young kids and a mortgage that’s got to be tough.” Then you might say, “Oh, losing my job isn’t all that bad, it’s just a great opportunity!” This will help you experience how these styles simply aren’t about reality, and also don’t get you anywhere.

Score Range of 55-84: Strengthening

People at the  Strengthening level are aware of the coping styles that have not been helpful for them in dealing with negative realities. You are also working on moving past them. These styles include denial, minimizing, working harder, self-judgment and shaming oneself, blame and entitlement attitudes. You are giving these styles up, because they simply don’t work, and you are renouncing them. The next set of skills will now help you navigate to a higher level.

SKILLS

Key Information

Personal Insight

Write in your paragraph the major healthy ways of dealing with negative realities:

  • Accepting “what is.”
  • Forgiving and being forgiven.
  • Grieving in healthy ways.
  • Learning lessons.
  • Adapting life to the new reality.

List which ones come easily for you, and which ones are more of a growth challenge.

Growth Conversation

Talk to a safe, supportive and mature person about their understanding of the difference between forgiving and being forgiven. Ask them how they handle the two.

Stretching experience

People who are proficient in the Life Capacity of Reality can let go of their losses emotionally. This is what the grief process is all about. It is not easy, but it causes great growth and healing. Find a supportive person, and in a conversation with them, take these steps:

  • Identify a significant personal or work loss that you have not addressed emotionally.
  • Describe what happened, and how the loss impacted you.
  • Describe the feelings of sadness you had then, and are having now, about it.
  • Allow yourself to shed tears about the situation.
  • Give this some time, as sad feelings often take longer to access. Be patient with the process.
  • Allow the person to be present, supportive and comforting to you.

Grief is not an impulsive act. It is a skill, with a structure to it, that must be learned.

Score Range of 85-100: Sustaining

The Sustaining level indicates that you are practiced in the major healthy ways of dealing with negative realities: You can face both positives and negatives equally well, and your emotional state, relationships and activities are better for it. The skills below will keep you moving along in the same direction.

SKILLS

Key Information

Personal Insight

Write your paragraph on what current negative realities you are facing in your personal and professional life. With each, write down which of the major healthy ways of dealing with the negative, from the section above, matter most to you, and how you will implement them.

Growth Conversation

Talk to a supportive person about what they have noticed in your growth, and what they like about this part of you, even the “truth-telling” part. It is a sign of a healthy person that they appreciate your boundaries, and don’t resent you for them.

Stretching experience

Seek out someone who has mistreated you and, if the situation is appropriate, tell them you forgive them, and do so from the heart. We truly grow when we “forgive the unforgivable.” This does not mean that there are no consequences to whatever they did, and it may not mean there is reconciliation, because that requires change for both parties. But for your part, forgive that person.

Life Capacity #4: Adulthood

Successful people are not only grown-ups on the outside, but also on the inside. That is, they have the ability to function and relate as adults with other adults. There are two key areas of competence in the Capability area. One is more psychological, and one is more behavioral.

Authority Position

The Authority Position describes the way you relate to others within authority roles of all sorts: bosses, colleagues, direct reports, parents, leaders and children, for example. There are four basic positions. The first position is the healthiest, while the other three are incomplete areas to grow from:

  • The Adult Position: relating well as a mutual, respectful, comfortable and equal person with any level of authority. This is the most developed position.
  • The Child Position: relating in a one-down manner, feeling intimidated by, and often seeking approval from, authority figures.
  • The Adolescent Position: resenting, habitually challenging and resisting authority.
  • The Parent Position: relating in a one-up manner to others; attempting to control and micromanage others in your life without intending to.

Life Purpose Path

The Authority Position describes the way you relate to others within authority roles of all sorts: bosses, colleagues, direct reports, parents, leaders and children, for example. There are four basic positions. The first position is the healthiest, while the other three are incomple

Individuals with Capability are focused and clear in their own personal and vocational purpose in life. They have identified and are integrating the five critical elements of purpose below into a way of relating, working and growing:

  • Passions: knowing and developing the activities that you naturally love to do and engage in.
  • Talents: identifying and growing in the skills you possess.
  • Work ethic: the ability to be disciplined, and focusing on following through.
  • Vocation: a job and career context that fits who you are.
  • Mission: how you want to make the world a better place for your being in it.

Score Range of 0-24: Starting

Individuals at the Starting level are beginning to take their place in the world. However, in times of stress or conflict, you may tend to default to the Child, Adolescent or Parent Positions.

Regarding life purpose, this may be something you desire and value, but you have not established as much direction and growth in this area as you need. The following skills will help you move to the next level.

SKILLS

Key Information

Personal Insight

  • Adult Position: Write a paragraph on each of the following:
    • Your vision and desire for the benefits of relating and functioning as an adult for your life and career.
    • Which incomplete Position you tend to default to, and two examples.
  • Life Purpose Path: Write a paragraph on your vision for the benefits of living out your meaningful and productive life purpose path. List which of the five purpose elements below that you need to strengthen to help you, and how. For example:
    • Passion: write how your passions fit in with your purpose.
    • Talents: take an assessment of your talents and strengths.
    • Work ethic: if discipline has been a challenge, ask someone to help you be accountable to stay on track by checking in on your progress regularly.
    • Vocation: explore the vocational world options to see if your current work fits with who you are, and what you are about.
    • Mission: write down what you want to contribute to the world in the big picture.

Growth Conversation

Talk to someone about their perspective of you in both the Authority and the Purpose areas. Where do they see you as having strengths, and where do they see you as having challenges?

Stretching experience

  • Adult Position: Write down what you understand to be the origins of where you are in the Authority Position and your Purpose. What significant relationships and experiences throughout your life contributed to influence you to be at this level? Don’t be surprised if you experience negative feelings about this, as they can be painful realizations. Just continue in the process; it will be worth it.
  • Life Purpose Path: Map out and calendar your path. The hard part here is pruning back activities that prevent you from having the time. It is not the bad things we need to avoid, but the good things, which keep us from the best things, which keeps us from purpose. Avoiding robbing banks shouldn’t be a big sacrifice! But saying “no” to being available to all your friends all the time can be a sacrifice. You will most likely need help from someone to help you think through this.

Score Range of 25-54: Growing

Individuals at the Growing level can both understand and experience where they begin and where they end. You have clarity about differentiating between the feelings and needs of others, and your own. You know what you like and dislike, and what you are “for” and “against.” However, it is often difficult for you to be honest with others when you need to tell them no, disappoint an expectation of theirs, or disagree. Improving these skills will help you grow in this arena.

SKILLS

Key Information

Personal Insight

  • Adult Position: Write a paragraph on what fears have kept you stuck in the Child, Adolescent or Parent positions. Along with this, write another paragraph on what coping styles have also been obstacles in this area.
  • Life Purpose Path: Write a paragraph on any false starts you have had in establishing a life of purpose, and make sure that you have thought through these with a supportive person.

Growth Conversation

  • Adult Position: Ask a supportive person to help you think through your fears and coping styles. One of the most helpful approaches that an individual can take with you is to both validate that your concerns are important, and not dismiss them, and to de-catastrophize them as well. That is, if you challenge an authority figure, they may not like it, but you will not lose your job (as long as that is objectively not likely).
  • Life Purpose Path: Ask your supportive person to check in with you a couple of times a week in the first month of your path, just so you will know someone is engaged and interested in you, and to have someone to bounce off questions with and to stay accountable and focused.

Stretching experience

  • Adult Position: Role-play a conversation with a supportive person in which you try out the healthy aspect of the Adult Position. Come up with some situation, such as a conversation with a boss, a parent, a direct report, a child, or some other person with whom you disagree:
    • Child: Instead of instant compliance, respectfully challenge and “push back” on their point of view.
    • Adolescent: After some resistance, agree to do it their way, while maintaining your self-respect.
    • Parent: Instead of providing all the answers and pushing your point of view on them, allow them to have their own decisions and accountability, at some appropriate level.
  • Life Purpose Path: Plan your work and work your plan! Move out of the thinking and planning stage to actually “doing” what will get you into your life of purpose. It will be critical to have someone supportive to help you navigate through this, especially if this is a new area for you.

Score Range of 55-84: Strengthening

The Strengthening level indicates that you are now actively facing and dealing with any fears about changing your default position. You have also identified the coping styles you have taken; you understand at a deeper level why this position has been so difficult to change.

Regarding life purpose, you have moved from thinking and crafting your Purpose Path to executing it. You are rationalizing and behaving in a way that is moving you in the right direction. Your calendar reflects scheduled appointments, meetings and projects that show that this is happening beyond the planning stage. The skills below will help you move to the next level.

SKILLS

Key Information

Personal Insight

  • Adult Position: Write a paragraph of commitment that you are done with your default position. You don’t need it anymore, and you have moved past it. From now on, you will be relinquishing the patterns of relating as a Child, Adolescent or Parent, and will be continuing in your personal and professional life as an adult.
  • Life Purpose Path: Now that you have been on the purpose path for a period, the honeymoon is over, and it can become a grind. Write down again why this is worth the work for you. Also, write a paragraph on what is working, and what needs to be fine-tuned.

Growth Conversation

  • Adult Position: Have someone supportive tell you authentically how they have seen you grow in a healthier way of relating.
  • Life Purpose Path: Have them tell you the same about how they see you on the path.

Stretching experience

  • Adult Position: Have a conversation with a real person in your life; this is not a role-play! Talk with someone with whom you have habitually found yourself relating as a Child, Adolescent or Parent. Using the skills you have been working on, try to establish a healthier relationship. Hopefully, the person will appreciate the new way of relating you provide. However, if they do not, you have still benefited, because you are using new “muscles” that will help you relate and function at higher levels for the rest of your life.
  • Life Purpose Path: Step back a bit from the path and determine if your life is in balance. If you find that it is too task-oriented and driven, adapt the path to include relationships, passions, and self-care. If you find that you are neglecting the path, and being distracted to spend your time and energy in other ways, figure out the “why” and redirect yourself.

Score Range of 85-100: Sustaining

At the Sustaining level for Capability, you are relating and operating in the Adult Position, stably and effectively.

In addition, your life purpose is integrated and moving ahead on track, including the elements of Passions, Talents, Work Ethic, Vocation and Mission. The skills below will help you maintain and continue your work at this level.

SKILLS

Key Information

Personal Insight

  • Adult Position: Write down how being stable in the Adult Position has helped your life, relationships, work and how you are making a difference. Cement the growth with these thoughts.
  • Life Purpose Path: At the Proficient level, challenges tend to increase in their complexity and sophistication. Olympic athletes have more complex struggles in their training than do high school athletes. Write down the nature of the challenges you are currently facing, and what you can do about them.

Growth Conversation

Have conversations with a supportive person regarding your Capability:

  • Adult Position: Invite them to let you know any time they see you reverting to Child, Adolescent or Parent positions in your relationships. An extra set of eyes, outside our perspective, is invaluable.
  • Life Purpose Path: Ask them about their path as well, and what they are learning. People who have meaningful directions in life possess a lot of lessons and wisdom to help each other.

Stretching experience

  • Adult Position: Help those in your life and profession who also tend to get stuck in the Child, Adolescent or Parent position. Tell them what insights and skills you have learned. One way to continue to build on a strength is to help others develop it as well.
  • Life Purpose Path: Over time, we tend to grow and change. We do not stay the same people in every area of our lives. Growing people are creative and energetic. They develop different interests, skills, and passions. So periodically review if the path still fits who you are, and where you were designed to go. If it does not, dig back into it and adapt it. Your path should serve you, not the other way around.

List of Emotions

There are many human emotions. A large emotional vocabulary can accelerate our growth and make communicating with others more satisfying. People who only have a few emotions they are aware of often have difficulty in relationships and careers. This list of 100 feelings is by no means comprehensive, but it is a good start.

ANGRY

Aggressive

Annoyed

Frustrated

Furious

Irritated

Judgmental

Rageful

Resentful

ANXIOUS

Agitated

Apprehensive

Desperate

Dread

Fearful

Intimidated

Nervous

Panicked

Terrified

Trapped

Vigilant

Worried

CONFUSED

Ambivalent

Awkward

Conflicted

Insane

Overwhelmed

Shocked

Stunned

Unsure

Unreal

down

Blue

Burdened

Dead

Defeated

Depressed

Despair

Disappointed

Discouraged

Helpless

Inconsolable

Hopeless

Sad

hurt

Agitated

Apprehensive

Desperate

Dread

Fearful

Intimidated

Nervous

Panicked

Terrified

Trapped

Vigilant

Worried

ISOLATED

Alone

Avoidant

Detached

Distant

Empty

Lost

Shy

Unseen

Emotions Toward Myself

Emotions I feel effect my personal well-being and attitude.

positive

Accepted

Attracted

Close

Compassionate

Connected

Friendly

Grateful

Interested

Intimate

Loving

Passionate

Pity

Safe

Tender

Vulnerable

Warm

NEGATIVE

Bored

Disgusted

Envious

Horrified

Jealous

Lustful

Numb

Revolted

Smothered

Suspicious

Emotions Toward Others or a Situation

positive

Accepted

Attracted

Close

Compassionate

Connected

Friendly

Grateful

Interested

Intimate

Loving

Passionate

Pity

Safe

Tender

Vulnerable

Warm

NEGATIVE

Bored

Disgusted

Envious

Horrified

Jealous

Lustful

Numb

Revolted

Smothered

Suspicious

Acknowledgments

Thanks to the following people for their passion, expertise and time in teaming up to help the TPRAT become a reality. Your work has been excellent and much appreciated:

Christine Ames, Karen Bergstrom, Ph.D., Keith Edwards, Ph.D., Scott Makin, M.A., Elaine Morris, Fauna Randolph, Patrick Sells and the Sells Group Web Development Team, the Fall 2018 Townsend Institute faculty and incoming students, the 2018 Townsend Leadership Group Best Practices Conference attendees and my wife, Barbi.