Psychological Prosperity Index: The Framework

September 1, 2025
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A society’s long-run prosperity depends less on what people know than on what they are allowed to experience: safety to speak, courage to try, dignity after mistakes, and real chances to create value together. The Psychological Prosperity Index (PPI) measures these lived, everyday conditions. It turns the invisible climate that governs trust, agency, and meaning into clear signals leaders and communities can act on—so more people can actually experience abundance, not just hear about it.

PPI is a rigorous, psychology-first benchmark covering 48 dimensions across eight clusters (from Inner Dignity & Self-Alignment to Meaning & Resilience). Each dimension is defined behaviorally and scored with short, plain-language items. Results roll up into cluster profiles and an overall prosperity score, alongside a companion “constraints” view that highlights suffering patterns (shame, learned helplessness, fear of judgment). The framework is designed to be practical: every low score maps to concrete, low-cost practices that communities can deploy immediately.

For individuals, PPI reports illuminate where freedom is already strong and where suffering still blocks expression or creativity. Instead of moralizing, each report offers two specific micro-actions per weak area (e.g., a simple repair script after conflict; a weekly demo ritual to reduce fear of public work). For teams, PPI normalizes honest feedback, focuses on shared learning, and replaces blame with small, reversible experiments that rebuild confidence and momentum.

At larger scales, PPI surfaces upstream levers—psychological conditions whose improvement unlocks many downstream gains (e.g., raising Safety to Dissent often boosts Feedback-Seeking, Creative Confidence, and “Ship-it” behavior). Dashboards show where to invest scarce time and money, track the effects of interventions (mentoring networks, restorative practices, maker spaces), and identify role-model sites that others can learn from. The result is smarter allocation and faster diffusion of what works.

What we measure, we tend to improve. Running PPI annually creates trend lines that reveal whether everyday life is becoming easier, braver, and fairer—or where progress is stalling. Because the items are stable and validated, year-over-year shifts reflect real cultural change, not noise. This enables early warnings (e.g., rising fear of judgment) and timely course corrections before problems harden into norms.

Many mature democracies consistently score higher on generalized trust, respectful dissent, and prosocial norms—psychological ingredients that compound into innovation, civic vitality, and wellbeing. PPI lets us benchmark against these climates, then borrow their proven practices: celebration of effort and originality, routine public “work-in-progress,” fair and transparent processes, robust mentoring and volunteering, and restorative repair after conflict. The goal is not imitation but adaptation—translating high-performing norms into our context so we close the gap faster.

PPI is strength-based, privacy-respecting, and transparent. Individuals own their results; public reporting is aggregated to avoid stigmatizing groups or regions. Scales are validated for reliability and measurement invariance so comparisons are fair. Communication pairs every “red” area with specific opportunities to practice better norms—because the purpose is empowerment, not ranking for its own sake.

The Intelligence Strategy Research Institute in collaboration with Metamatics intends to launch PPI with pilots in schools, workplaces, and municipalities; publish a national snapshot; then run it annually with an interventions library tied to each dimension. Over time, the Psychological Prosperity Index becomes a shared language for educators, employers, civic leaders, and citizens—a way to steer attention and resources toward the experiences that let people be themselves, create boldly, repair quickly, and build the kind of society where prosperity is felt in daily life.

Summary

A) Inner Dignity & Self-Alignment

  1. Unconditional Self-Worth — Stable sense of worth independent of status or approval.

  2. Self-Acceptance of Imperfection — Warm acknowledgment of flaws while staying growth-oriented.

  3. Self-Compassion Under Stress — Kind inner response to setbacks that preserves momentum.

  4. Identity Coherence — Feeling like the same person across roles; low masking.

  5. Forgiveness & Letting Go (Self/Others) — Releasing shame/resentment to restore forward motion.

  6. Boundaries & Assertiveness — Stating needs/limits clearly without guilt.

B) Psychological Safety & Social Trust

  1. Expectation of Benevolence (Trust) — Default belief that people are generally fair and cooperative.

  2. Safety to Dissent — Confidence to disagree without ridicule or penalty.

  3. Belonging Security — Felt inclusion; “I am of this group,” not just in it.

  4. Perceived Everyday Fairness — Lived sense of even-handed norms and treatment.

  5. Rupture–Repair Skill — Actively mending trust after tensions or mistakes.

  6. Outgroup Warmth (Bridging) — Prosocial openness toward people unlike oneself.

C) Agency & Courage

  1. Internal Locus of Control — Belief that actions meaningfully affect outcomes.

  2. Ownership of Outcomes — Habit of claiming responsibility vs. outsourcing blame.

  3. Constructive Risk Appetite — Willingness to make sensible, reversible bets.

  4. Courage to Act Publicly — Readiness to ship/stand visibly despite critique.

  5. Initiative/Proactivity — Self-starting without waiting for permission.

  6. Grit & Follow-Through — Sustained effort across obstacles until completion.

D) Openness, Curiosity & Cognitive Flexibility

  1. Intellectual Curiosity — Drive to explore ideas, people, and fields.

  2. Perspective-Taking (Cognitive Empathy) — Modeling others’ viewpoints fairly.

  3. Cognitive Flexibility — Switching strategies; updating beliefs when facts change.

  4. Playfulness & Exploratory Spirit — Lightness that enables trying and inventing.

  5. Intellectual Humility — Comfort with being wrong; evidence over ego.

  6. Relational Presence (Attention Sovereignty) — Undivided attention/deep listening that honors others.

E) Emotion Skills & Vitality

  1. Emotional Awareness — Noticing and labeling internal states accurately.

  2. Emotion Regulation & Self-Soothing — Returning to centeredness without suppression.

  3. Distress Tolerance — Staying engaged under discomfort or ambiguity.

  4. Vital Energy (Somatic Readiness) — Felt capacity (sleep/movement/nutrition) to engage.

  5. Interoceptive Awareness for Co-Regulation — Reading body signals to co-regulate with others.

  6. Hopeful Optimism — Expectation of workable paths forward grounded in agency.

F) Creativity, Learning & Making

  1. Creative Confidence — Belief one’s ideas are worth exploring and sharing.

  2. Experimentation Habit — Default to test-and-learn over debate-and-wait.

  3. Feedback-Seeking Orientation — Actively inviting critique to improve.

  4. Positive-Sum Mindset — Seeing value creation as expandable, not zero-sum.

  5. Ship-It Bias (Completion Orientation) — Preference for finishing/releasing to learn faster.

  6. Flow Capacity (Deep Engagement) — Ease of entering sustained, absorbing work states.

G) Prosocial Connection & Integrity

  1. Warmth & Affective Empathy — Emotional attunement and care for others’ states.

  2. Reciprocity & Generosity — Helping without immediate return; building robust ties.

  3. Integrity & Reliability — Doing what you say; truthfulness and follow-through.

  4. Respectful Disagreement (Conflict Skill) — Voicing hard truths while preserving respect.

  5. Admiration Capacity (Anti-Envy) — Turning others’ excellence into inspiration.

  6. Co-Elevation (Championing Others) — Actively boosting peers’ growth and visibility.

H) Meaning, Direction & Resilience

  1. Purpose/Ikigai Clarity — Alignment of strengths, values, contribution, and joy.

  2. Values Congruence (Walk the Talk) — Daily behavior matches stated values.

  3. Growth Mindset & Antifragility — Using challenge to become stronger and wiser.

  4. Gratitude & Savoring — Regular appreciation that widens attention to the good.

  5. Awe & Transcendence Sensitivity — Openness to experiences larger than self; perspective expansion.

  6. Narrative Coherence (Life Story Integration) — Making sense of one’s past/present/future as a meaningful arc.


Dimensions

Group A: Inner Dignity & Self-Alignment

1) Unconditional Self-Worth

Definition (2 lines):
A stable, non-transactional sense of worth that does not depend on status, output, or others’ approval.
It anchors identity so feedback informs performance without threatening the self.

How it serves society

  • Lowers status anxiety → more cooperation and idea-sharing.

  • Enables bolder experiments (less fear of ego injury) → more innovation.

  • Reduces envy/undermining → healthier recognition culture.

  • Increases resilience after failure → faster learning cycles.

Mainly shaped by

  • Strength-based pedagogy in schools; anti-bullying norms; mentoring.

  • Rituals that celebrate character, effort, and contribution (not only rank).

  • Visible, diverse role models; inclusive community organizations.

  • Accessible counseling/mental-health literacy; parenting supports.

If not maximized: symptoms & ripple effects

  • Symptoms: approval-chasing, perfectionism, tall-poppy resentment, fragile ego.

  • Affected variables (downstream): Creative Confidence (31), Safety to Dissent (8), Courage to Act Publicly (16), Admiration Capacity (41), Belonging Security (9), Feedback-Seeking (33).


2) Self-Acceptance of Imperfection

Definition (2 lines):
A warm, reality-based stance toward one’s flaws while remaining committed to growth.
Mistakes become information, not identity verdicts.

How it serves society

  • Normalizes iteration → more Experimentation Habit (32) and Ship-It Bias (35).

  • Reduces defensive reactions to critique → better Feedback Culture (33, 15).

  • Prevents paralysis from perfectionism → higher throughput and learning velocity.

  • Sustains collaboration (less blame, more fix-it energy).

Mainly shaped by

  • Assessment practices that reward revisions and learning (retakes, portfolios).

  • “Error = data” norms in workshops/hackspaces; demo days.

  • Coaching in growth-mindset language; peer retrospectives.

  • Public leaders modeling “I was wrong; here’s what changed.”

If not maximized: symptoms & ripple effects

  • Symptoms: perfectionism, procrastination, hiding drafts, brittle identity.

  • Affected variables: Constructive Risk Appetite (15), Ship-It Bias (35), Feedback-Seeking (33), Growth Mindset & Antifragility (45), Courage to Act Publicly (16).


3) Self-Compassion Under Stress

Definition (2 lines):
A kind, stabilizing inner response during setbacks that preserves agency and learning.
It interrupts shame spirals and restores problem-solving.

How it serves society

  • Keeps people engaged under pressure → higher Grit & Follow-Through (18).

  • Lowers burnout and reactivity → steadier teams, fewer conflicts.

  • Encourages help-seeking and early course-corrections.

  • Improves recovery after experiments fail → more net innovation.

Mainly shaped by

  • Mental-health literacy and access (counseling, peer support).

  • Compassion training/mindfulness micro-practices embedded at school/work.

  • Supervisor/mentor scripts that normalize struggle and learning.

  • Workload policies that allow recovery (sleep, breaks, realistic pacing).

If not maximized: symptoms & ripple effects

  • Symptoms: harsh self-talk, avoidance after errors, quick burnout.

  • Affected variables: Emotion Regulation (26), Distress Tolerance (27), Grit (18), Hopeful Optimism (30), Experimentation Habit (32).


4) Identity Coherence (Being Oneself)

Definition (2 lines):
A felt consistency of values and self across roles and contexts; low masking.
You can “be the same person” at home, work, and in public.

How it serves society

  • Frees cognitive bandwidth (less masking) → more creativity and focus.

  • Strengthens trust (people are legible and predictable).

  • Increases moral courage and principled dissent.

  • Raises engagement—people choose roles that fit their values/talents.

Mainly shaped by

  • Values-clarification and purpose/ikigai programs; career guidance.

  • Inclusive norms (psychological safety; anti-stigma for identity expression).

  • Flexible role design and mobility (fit over conformity).

  • Storytelling spaces (speaker series, circles) that honor diverse life paths.

If not maximized: symptoms & ripple effects

  • Symptoms: masking, role conflict, chronic fatigue from impression-management.

  • Affected variables: Values Congruence (44), Purpose/Ikigai (43), Safety to Dissent (8), Belonging Security (9), Courage to Act Publicly (16), Narrative Coherence (48).


5) Forgiveness & Letting Go (Self/Others)

Definition (2 lines):
Capacity to release resentment and shame, learn what’s useful, and move forward.
It reopens connection and energy otherwise trapped in the past.

How it serves society

  • Enables Rupture–Repair (11) → relationships survive conflict and improve.

  • Reduces grievance cycles and revenge norms → more collaboration.

  • Restores participation of people after mistakes → preserves talent.

  • Lowers stress load → clearer thinking and creativity.

Mainly shaped by

  • Restorative practices (mediation, apology/repair rituals).

  • Justice mechanisms perceived as fair; conflict-resolution education.

  • Community/service projects that integrate “amends in action.”

  • Public narratives that highlight redemption and second chances.

If not maximized: symptoms & ripple effects

  • Symptoms: rumination, grudges, social fragmentation, learned helplessness.

  • Affected variables: Warmth & Empathy (37), Reciprocity (38), Outgroup Warmth (12), Integrity & Reliability (39), Gratitude (46), Hopeful Optimism (30).


6) Boundaries & Assertiveness

Definition (2 lines):
Ability to state needs and limits clearly, say no without guilt, and make requests respectfully.
Protects energy, dignity, and clarity in relationships.

How it serves society

  • Prevents burnout → preserves Vital Energy (28) and sustained excellence.

  • Reduces hidden resentment → cleaner collaboration and trust.

  • Speeds coordination (clear yes/no) → fewer passive-aggressive loops.

  • Enables fair conflict and mutual respect → healthier teams.

Mainly shaped by

  • Consent and assertiveness education; communication skills training.

  • Workload/meeting norms (right of refusal; focus time; realistic scopes).

  • HR policies that back “no” without retaliation; whistleblower protections.

  • Coaching/mentoring that models requests, limits, and negotiated agreements.

If not maximized: symptoms & ripple effects

  • Symptoms: overcommitment, people-pleasing, resentment, chaotic priorities.

  • Affected variables: Respectful Disagreement (40), Integrity & Reliability (39), Reciprocity (38), Courage to Act Publicly (16), Flow Capacity (36), Vital Energy (28).


Group B: Psychological Safety & Social Trust


7) Expectation of Benevolence (Social Trust)

Definition (≈2 lines):
A default, reality-tested belief that most people act fairly and intend no harm.
Not naïveté, but a stance that others are generally cooperative until proven otherwise.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Cuts coordination costs (less guarding/monitoring) → faster collaboration.

  • Increases information-sharing and help-seeking across teams and networks.

  • Lowers fear in first moves → more Initiative/Proactivity (17) and small bets.

  • Stabilizes moods and reduces threat reactivity → clearer judgment and creativity.

Mainly shaped by (institutions/mechanisms/opportunities)

  • Consistent pro-social micro-norms: visible helping, reciprocation, public thanks.

  • Peer accountability and fair rule enforcement in schools, teams, communities.

  • Transparent grievance/repair channels that actually resolve issues.

  • Mutual-aid circles, mentoring networks, community service with mixed groups.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: suspicion, hoarding, defensive communication, opt-out from joint work.

  • Downstream hits: Belonging Security (9), Safety to Dissent (8), Reciprocity & Generosity (38), Feedback-Seeking (33), Positive-Sum Mindset (34), Outgroup Warmth (12), Constructive Risk Appetite (15).


8) Safety to Dissent

Definition (≈2 lines):
Confidence that you can challenge ideas, escalate concerns, or offer minority views
without ridicule, status loss, or retaliation.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Surfaces weak assumptions early → fewer expensive failures later.

  • Enables Experimentation Habit (32) and Ship-It Bias (35) with honest previews of risk.

  • Builds intellectual honesty → higher Intellectual Humility (23) and learning velocity.

  • Attracts independent thinkers; retains talent that would otherwise disengage.

Mainly shaped by

  • Meeting norms: explicit “disagree then commit,” dissent roles (“red team”).

  • Leader modeling: thanking dissenters; separating people from ideas.

  • Anonymous/low-friction escalation paths; whistleblower protections that work.

  • Debate training (steel-manning, non-violent communication) in schools/work.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: groupthink, self-censorship, “meetings after the meeting.”

  • Downstream hits: Creative Confidence (31), Feedback-Seeking (33), Courage to Act Publicly (16), Cognitive Flexibility (21), Respectful Disagreement (40), Positive-Sum Mindset (34).


9) Belonging Security

Definition (≈2 lines):
A felt sense of being “of” the group (not merely “in” it): seen, accepted, and
expected to contribute as oneself.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Frees cognitive bandwidth (less masking) → deeper Flow Capacity (36).

  • Raises discretionary effort and idea-sharing; reduces social threat vigilance.

  • Increases retention and cross-group cooperation; strengthens networks.

  • Normalizes help-seeking and mentorship loops.

Mainly shaped by

  • Stable cohorts/peer circles; onboarding that connects identities to roles.

  • Inclusion rituals (first-name rounds, story circles, gratitude practices).

  • Visible role models from diverse backgrounds; equitable opportunity access.

  • Clear anti-exclusion norms; bystander training to interrupt micro-aggressions.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: impostor feelings, isolation, muted participation, exit/avoidance.

  • Downstream hits: Identity Coherence (4), Creative Confidence (31), Vital Energy (28), Initiative (17), Reciprocity (38), Integrity & Reliability (39).


10) Perceived Everyday Fairness

Definition (≈2 lines):
A lived, day-to-day sense that rules, recognition, and workload are applied
even-handedly and explanations are transparent.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Converts skepticism to engagement → people invest effort when the game feels fair.

  • Stabilizes trust even under bad outcomes (process fairness).

  • Reduces status anxiety and politicking → focus moves to value creation.

  • Encourages Ownership of Outcomes (14) because the field feels level.

Mainly shaped by

  • Clear criteria for selection, promotion, recognition; transparent decisions.

  • Consistent enforcement of norms across status lines; no special cases.

  • Open feedback channels with reasoned responses; lightweight appeals.

  • Shared workload dashboards; rotation of unglamorous tasks.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: cynicism, disengagement, performative compliance, quiet quitting.

  • Downstream hits: Expectation of Benevolence (7), Ownership (14), Constructive Risk Appetite (15), Reciprocity (38), Respectful Disagreement (40), Courage to Act Publicly (16).


11) Rupture–Repair Skill

Definition (≈2 lines):
The capacity to acknowledge harm or tension, offer/ask for repair, and restore
trust to a stronger level than before.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Keeps valuable relationships intact after inevitable frictions.

  • Enables fast cycles of conflict → learning → closeness, not drift.

  • Lowers fear of honest feedback; nourishes durable collaboration.

  • Models accountability and forgiveness → cultural contagion of repair.

Mainly shaped by

  • Restorative practices (facilitated dialogues, mediated apologies, amends plans).

  • Shared repair scripts (“impact → ownership → action → follow-up”).

  • Training in empathic listening and specific, behavior-based feedback.

  • Time/space allocated for repair (not just “move on”).

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: festering tensions, silent grudges, factionalism, talent loss.

  • Downstream hits: Warmth & Empathy (37), Integrity & Reliability (39), Belonging Security (9), Feedback-Seeking (33), Reciprocity (38), Narrative Coherence (48).


12) Outgroup Warmth (Bridging)

Definition (≈2 lines):
A prosocial stance toward people unlike oneself (class, region, worldview),
paired with curiosity and willingness to cooperate.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Expands idea diversity → better problem-solving and innovation.

  • Reduces polarization; unlocks larger coalitions for complex goals.

  • Increases market/customer empathy → better products and services.

  • Strengthens Positive-Sum Mindset (34) and cross-community reciprocity.

Mainly shaped by

  • Structured intergroup contact with shared goals and equal status.

  • Joint projects/hackathons that mix backgrounds and reward collaboration.

  • Narrative exchanges (life-story interviews, “bridge dinners”).

  • Mixed-network mentoring; rotation across regions/teams.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: stereotyping, echo chambers, us-vs-them thinking, coordination failure.

  • Downstream hits: Perspective-Taking (20), Positive-Sum Mindset (34), Safety to Dissent (8), Reciprocity (38), Admiration Capacity (41), Creative Confidence (31).


Group C: Agency & Courage


13) Internal Locus of Control

Definition (≈2 lines):
A reality-based belief that one’s actions meaningfully influence outcomes.
Not magical thinking—clear sight of constraints + focus on controllables.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Raises initiative and problem ownership; less waiting for “permission.”

  • Increases persistence after setbacks → faster learning loops.

  • Lowers helplessness/anxiety → more bandwidth for creativity.

  • Amplifies civic and entrepreneurial engagement (people act on ideas).

Mainly shaped by (institutions/mechanisms/opportunities)

  • Effort→outcome pedagogy (mastery learning, portfolios, retakes).

  • Apprenticeships/service learning with visible impact of actions.

  • Goal-setting & tracking rituals (OKRs, weekly “next best action”).

  • Civic feedback loops (report–fix–acknowledge pipelines) that work.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: fatalism, passivity, blaming context, disengagement.

  • Downstream hits: Ownership of Outcomes (14), Initiative (17), Constructive Risk Appetite (15), Grit (18), Hopeful Optimism (30), Experimentation Habit (32), Ship-It Bias (35).


14) Ownership of Outcomes

Definition (≈2 lines):
A practiced habit of claiming responsibility for results (good or bad),
acknowledging constraints while adjusting one’s actions to improve.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Turns mistakes into process fixes → compounding improvement.

  • Builds trust/reliability → teams coordinate faster, with less oversight.

  • Reduces politics/blame → more time spent creating value.

  • Encourages honest metrics and learning culture.

Mainly shaped by

  • Blameless but accountable retrospectives; clear owners for actions.

  • Transparent goals (OKRs), RACI clarity, public progress dashboards.

  • Coaching for specific, behavior-linked feedback; role modeling by leaders.

  • Promotion/recognition tied to ownership, not spin.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: excuse-making, defensiveness, credit-hoarding, slow fixes.

  • Downstream hits: Integrity & Reliability (39), Feedback-Seeking (33), Respectful Disagreement (40), Perceived Everyday Fairness (10), Expectation of Benevolence (7), Courage to Act Publicly (16), Grit (18).


15) Constructive Risk Appetite

Definition (≈2 lines):
Willingness to take sensible, reversible, positive-EV bets; calibrating risk by
using small experiments and option-like moves.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Unlocks experimentation → discovery of better methods/products.

  • Prevents stagnation and over-reliance on precedent.

  • Encourages entrepreneurship and career mobility.

  • Normalizes “learn by doing,” accelerating innovation cycles.

Mainly shaped by

  • Microgrants/small-bet funds; prototyping labs and sandboxes.

  • Safety nets for failed attempts (reputation recovery, second chances).

  • Reversible decision policies; trial licenses/pilots by default.

  • Assessment norms that reward well-argued bets, not just outcomes.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: status-quo bias, analysis paralysis, fear of novelty.

  • Downstream hits: Experimentation Habit (32), Ship-It Bias (35), Creative Confidence (31), Initiative (17), Flow Capacity (36), Hopeful Optimism (30).


16) Courage to Act Publicly

Definition (≈2 lines):
Readiness to ship work and take visible stands despite potential critique;
valuing shared learning over personal image protection.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Speeds iteration via real feedback from real audiences.

  • Creates role models; raises cultural bar for contribution.

  • Increases transparency and trust (“we show our work”).

  • Reduces perfectionism → more throughput and bolder ideas.

Mainly shaped by

  • Regular demo days/show-and-tell; public changelogs and learnings.

  • Recognition for first movers (not only polished end results).

  • Psychological safety norms around early drafts.

  • Low-friction publishing channels; lightweight approval paths.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: hiding drafts, endless prep, bystander effect, timid roadmaps.

  • Downstream hits: Ship-It Bias (35), Safety to Dissent (8), Creative Confidence (31), Feedback-Seeking (33), Admiration Capacity (41), Co-Elevation (42).


17) Initiative/Proactivity

Definition (≈2 lines):
Self-starting action without waiting for external prompts;
seeing and seizing openings to improve situations.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Converts ideas into pilots → momentum compounds.

  • Prevents problems early; lowers management overhead.

  • Distributes leadership → more resilient, adaptive systems.

  • Increases surface area for serendipity and collaboration.

Mainly shaped by

  • Autonomy-by-default role design; “permissionless contribution” norms.

  • Idea pipelines with quick triage; 20% time; microgrants.

  • Easy access to tools, data, and small budgets; low procurement friction.

  • Clear mandate framing (“If it helps goal X and is reversible, do it.”).

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: waiting for orders, stagnation, missed windows, micromanagement.

  • Downstream hits: Internal Locus (13), Ownership (14), Experimentation Habit (32), Grit (18), Ship-It Bias (35), Positive-Sum Mindset (34).


18) Grit & Follow-Through

Definition (≈2 lines):
Sustained, disciplined effort across obstacles until meaningful completion;
sticking with priorities long enough for compound returns.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Raises completion rates → real value shipped, not just ideas.

  • Builds credibility/trust → better coordination and bigger bets.

  • Enables mastery (deep practice over time) → higher quality output.

  • Stabilizes optimism via visible progress and wins.

Mainly shaped by

  • Milestoning and project hygiene (clear scopes, check-ins, blockers removed).

  • Accountability partnerships; public commitments; progress logs.

  • Long-horizon apprenticeships and craft pathways.

  • Stable funding/time blocks to protect deep work.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: unfinished projects, constant context switching, cynicism.

  • Downstream hits: Integrity & Reliability (39), Ship-It Bias (35), Flow Capacity (36), Narrative Coherence (48), Purpose/Ikigai (43), Hopeful Optimism (30), Expectation of Benevolence (7).


Group D: Openness, Curiosity & Cognitive Flexibility


19) Intellectual Curiosity

Definition (≈2 lines):
An intrinsic drive to explore new ideas, people, and domains, motivated by wonder rather than status or fear.
Seeks disconfirming evidence and surprising perspectives as fuel for learning.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Expands the idea pool → more novel combinations and solutions.

  • Increases Experimentation Habit (32) and real-world discovery.

  • Reduces premature certainty → fewer brittle decisions.

  • Attracts diverse collaborators; strengthens cross-field bridges.

Mainly shaped by (institutions/mechanisms/opportunities)

  • Inquiry-centered pedagogy (projects, portfolios, student questions).

  • Public lecture salons, cross-disciplinary hack nights, open labs.

  • Easy access to libraries, datasets, maker spaces, cultural venues.

  • Recognition for good questions and exploration processes (not just outcomes).

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: apathy, narrow interests, reliance on received wisdom.

  • Downstream hits: Cognitive Flexibility (21), Perspective-Taking (20), Creative Confidence (31), Experimentation Habit (32), Flow Capacity (36), Positive-Sum Mindset (34), Feedback-Seeking (33).


20) Perspective-Taking (Cognitive Empathy)

Definition (≈2 lines):
The capacity to model another person’s viewpoint accurately—even when you disagree.
Understands motives, constraints, and context without endorsing them.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Improves negotiation and coalition-building across differences.

  • Elevates product/service design through deeper user understanding.

  • Lowers caricature and polarization → enables Respectful Disagreement (40).

  • Supports better forecasts (integrating multiple mental models).

Mainly shaped by

  • Role-reversal debates, steel-manning drills, ethnographic interviewing.

  • Mixed-background teamwork, buddy programs across groups/regions.

  • Narrative exchanges (life-story circles, oral histories).

  • Media literacy and bias-spotting curricula.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: stereotyping, “us vs. them” thinking, brittle debates.

  • Downstream hits: Outgroup Warmth (12), Respectful Disagreement (40), Safety to Dissent (8), Warmth & Empathy (37), Positive-Sum Mindset (34), Rupture–Repair (11).


21) Cognitive Flexibility

Definition (≈2 lines):
The ability to switch strategies, reframe problems, and update beliefs as evidence changes.
Prefers adaptive rules over rigid scripts; notices when the context has shifted.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Prevents lock-in to failing plans; speeds course correction.

  • Enables creative reframing and cross-pollination of methods.

  • Increases Constructive Risk Appetite (15) (confidence to pivot).

  • Supports antifragility—systems that learn from shocks.

Mainly shaped by

  • “Assumption audits,” premortems/postmortems, and red-team reviews.

  • Rotations across roles/disciplines; problem-based learning.

  • Option-thinking workshops (reversible vs. irreversible choices).

  • Data transparency and rapid feedback loops on experiments.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: rigidity, sunk-cost persistence, ideology over evidence.

  • Downstream hits: Intellectual Humility (23), Experimentation Habit (32), Growth Mindset & Antifragility (45), Constructive Risk Appetite (15), Narrative Coherence (48), Ship-It Bias (35).


22) Playfulness & Exploratory Spirit

Definition (≈2 lines):
A light, permissive stance that invites trying, tinkering, and humor—reducing ego threat while learning.
Treats novelty as a playground, not a courtroom.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Lowers fear of failure → more Courage to Act Publicly (16) and shipping.

  • Boosts divergent thinking and surprising associations.

  • Increases energy and social bonding, easing tough work.

  • Makes experimentation sticky and enjoyable → sustained iteration.

Mainly shaped by

  • Hackathons, improv sessions, design sprints with “toy” prototypes.

  • Visible celebrations of clever attempts, not just polished wins.

  • Play-friendly spaces/tools (whiteboards, rapid prototyping kits).

  • Time set aside for curiosity projects; gamified learning loops.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: over-seriousness, perfectionism, fear of looking silly.

  • Downstream hits: Creative Confidence (31), Experimentation Habit (32), Flow Capacity (36), Ship-It Bias (35), Vital Energy (28), Courage to Act Publicly (16).


23) Intellectual Humility

Definition (≈2 lines):
Awareness of the limits of one’s knowledge; comfort saying “I might be wrong.”
Seeks contrary evidence and updates publicly.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Reduces ego battles; raises truth-seeking and decision quality.

  • Encourages Feedback-Seeking (33) and high-signal critique.

  • Enables coalition-building—status is less tied to being “right.”

  • Accelerates pivots when data contradicts the plan.

Mainly shaped by

  • Leaders modeling error admission and belief updates.

  • Rewarding evidence-based revisions (not just initial boldness).

  • Debate norms that score steel-manning and calibrated confidence.

  • Forecasting tournaments and probabilistic thinking practice.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: defensiveness, overconfidence, dominance displays, stalemates.

  • Downstream hits: Cognitive Flexibility (21), Safety to Dissent (8), Respectful Disagreement (40), Feedback-Seeking (33), Positive-Sum Mindset (34), Ownership of Outcomes (14).


24) Relational Presence (Attention Sovereignty)

Definition (≈2 lines):
Undivided, non-defensive attention in conversation—deep listening that signals “you matter.”
Protects shared focus from digital and ego distractions; supports co-regulation.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Builds trust quickly; strengthens Belonging Security (9).

  • Improves conflict resolution and Rupture–Repair (11).

  • Raises signal in feedback exchanges; reduces misunderstanding.

  • Increases creative synergy—people risk more when they feel heard.

Mainly shaped by

  • Device-free zones/rituals; meeting norms that protect turn-taking.

  • Training in active listening, paraphrasing, and reflective questioning.

  • Physical spaces that support face-to-face focus (acoustics, seating).

  • Time structures (buffers, 1:1s) that reduce rush and split attention.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: shallow dialogue, constant interruption, performative listening.

  • Downstream hits: Warmth & Empathy (37), Safety to Dissent (8), Respectful Disagreement (40), Reciprocity & Generosity (38), Integrity & Reliability (39), Belonging Security (9), Feedback-Seeking (33).


Group E: Emotion Skills & Vitality


25) Emotional Awareness

Definition (≈2 lines):
Skill of noticing and accurately labeling one’s emotions and their intensity in real time.
Turns raw affect into usable data for choices, boundaries, and communication.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Reduces miscommunication and blame; clarifies needs before conflict escalates.

  • Enables targeted self-regulation → fewer impulsive decisions.

  • Increases learning from feedback (you can separate sting from signal).

  • Frees cognitive bandwidth for Flow Capacity (36) and creative work.

Mainly shaped by (institutions/mechanisms/opportunities)

  • Social–emotional learning (SEL) curricula; check-in rituals; mood logs.

  • Access to counseling/peer-support groups; psychoeducation.

  • Reflective journaling prompts in schools/workplaces.

  • Coaching that models naming emotions + linking to actions.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: alexithymia, outbursts/shutdowns, need misfires, substance coping.

  • Downstream hits: Emotion Regulation (26), Distress Tolerance (27), Respectful Disagreement (40), Rupture–Repair (11), Boundaries & Assertiveness (6), Narrative Coherence (48).


26) Emotion Regulation & Self-Soothing

Definition (≈2 lines):
Ability to return to centeredness without suppressing feelings—through breath, reframing, movement, or support.
Keeps agency online under pressure.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Stabilizes teams; fewer conflicts spill over from stress.

  • Improves decision quality in high stakes/ambiguity.

  • Supports experimentation and recovery after failures.

  • Lowers burnout and preserves Grit & Follow-Through (18).

Mainly shaped by

  • Mindfulness/compassion training; cognitive reappraisal coaching.

  • Trauma-informed practices; access to quiet spaces/nature.

  • Reasonable workload/pace; protected breaks and sleep culture.

  • Peer co-regulation norms (brief resets, debriefs).

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: volatility, rumination, avoidance, conflict contagion.

  • Downstream hits: Safety to Dissent (8), Belonging Security (9), Grit (18), Courage to Act Publicly (16), Flow Capacity (36), Feedback-Seeking (33).


27) Distress Tolerance

Definition (≈2 lines):
Capacity to stay engaged through discomfort, uncertainty, and craving for relief, without resorting to maladaptive escape.
Permits progress during the “messy middle.”

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Sustains hard learning (new skills, tough feedback) to completion.

  • Prevents avoidance/procrastination; keeps experiments moving.

  • Improves crisis response and calm under pressure.

  • Enables principled stands when they are socially costly.

Mainly shaped by

  • Exposure training (safe, graded difficulty); stretch assignments with support.

  • Premortems/postmortems that normalize friction as part of process.

  • Coaching on urge-surfing, dialectical skills, and stoic techniques.

  • Clear escalation paths and debrief cycles after intense events.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: avoidance, numbing, quitting at first friction, shallow pivots.

  • Downstream hits: Constructive Risk Appetite (15), Experimentation Habit (32), Feedback-Seeking (33), Growth Mindset & Antifragility (45), Integrity & Reliability (39), Ship-It Bias (35).


28) Vital Energy (Somatic Readiness)

Definition (≈2 lines):
Baseline physical energy from sleep, movement, nutrition, light, and recovery that supports sustained engagement.
The somatic “fuel tank” for cognition, emotion, and creativity.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Boosts focus, memory, and problem-solving; lowers errors.

  • Increases patience and civility in interactions.

  • Enables deep work and longer Flow (36) stretches.

  • Prevents burnout; maintains Grit (18) over long arcs.

Mainly shaped by

  • Schedules aligned with circadian health; limits on meeting sprawl.

  • Movement micro-breaks; active commuting; access to daylight/greenspace.

  • Healthy food availability; sleep hygiene norms; recovery protections.

  • Health literacy and preventive care access.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: chronic fatigue, irritability, reactivity, low throughput.

  • Downstream hits: Flow Capacity (36), Grit (18), Hopeful Optimism (30), Relational Presence (24), Emotion Regulation (26), Courage to Act Publicly (16).


29) Interoceptive Awareness for Co-Regulation

Definition (≈2 lines):
Noticing one’s bodily cues (tension, breath, heartbeat) and using them to self-adjust and co-regulate with others during interaction.
Bridges body signals and relational attunement.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Enables early de-escalation before conflicts harden.

  • Improves empathy and timing in dialogue and feedback.

  • Supports healthy boundaries (“I’m near overload; let’s pause”).

  • Enhances group presence and creativity via calmer physiology.

Mainly shaped by

  • Somatic literacy courses (breathwork, posture, micro-relaxation).

  • Nonviolent communication practice; paced dialogues with pauses.

  • Coaching to read cues (voice tone, tempo) and name somatic states.

  • Space design that reduces noise and crowding; pacing of agendas.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: misattunement, escalation, shutting down or flooding.

  • Downstream hits: Warmth & Affective Empathy (37), Boundaries (6), Rupture–Repair (11), Respectful Disagreement (40), Relational Presence (24), Belonging Security (9).


30) Hopeful Optimism

Definition (≈2 lines):
A grounded expectation that better states are reachable through effort and collaboration; neither naïve nor fatalistic.
Keeps action oriented toward workable paths.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Counters learned helplessness; sustains Initiative (17) and Grit (18).

  • Increases risk-taking for positive-EV bets and innovation.

  • Spreads prosocial contagion (people invest in each other).

  • Improves mental health and resilience during shocks.

Mainly shaped by

  • Visible progress metrics and success stories from peers.

  • Mentoring that links goals to credible plans (“pathways thinking”).

  • Responsive civic/service loops (report → fix → acknowledge).

  • Media and leadership that calibrate threats with solutions.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: resignation, doomism, cynicism, short-termism.

  • Downstream hits: Internal Locus of Control (13), Initiative (17), Constructive Risk Appetite (15), Purpose/Ikigai Clarity (43), Positive-Sum Mindset (34), Gratitude & Savoring (46).


Group F: Creativity, Learning & Making


31) Creative Confidence

Definition (≈2 lines):
A felt belief that one’s ideas are worth exploring and sharing, and that originality is welcome.
Reduces self-censorship and frames novelty as a contribution, not a risk.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Expands the pipeline of novel options and combinations.

  • Lowers fear barriers → more proposals, prototypes, and public drafts.

  • Increases peer-to-peer inspiration and role-model effects.

  • Accelerates learning cycles by exposing early-stage thinking.

Mainly shaped by (institutions/mechanisms/opportunities)

  • Studio-style critique culture (kind, specific, actionable feedback).

  • Recognition that rewards originality/process, not only polished outcomes.

  • Safe-to-fail challenges, demo days, and public “work-in-progress” rituals.

  • Mentoring that spotlights unique strengths and niche expertise.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: self-silencing, derivative work, waiting for “perfect.”

  • Downstream hits: Safety to Dissent (8), Courage to Act Publicly (16), Experimentation Habit (32), Ship-It Bias (35), Feedback-Seeking (33), Initiative/Proactivity (17), Admiration Capacity (41).


32) Experimentation Habit

Definition (≈2 lines):
A default behavior of turning uncertainty into small, instrumented tests to get signal fast.
Chooses evidence over debate; treats results as guides, not verdicts.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Raises learning velocity and decision quality.

  • De-risks novelty via reversible, low-cost probes.

  • Builds a culture of curiosity and fact-based iteration.

  • Surfaces edge cases and user realities early.

Mainly shaped by

  • Microgrant funds, sandboxes, prototyping labs, and rapid approvals.

  • Instrumentation/analytics for quick readouts; A/B testing capability.

  • “Default-to-pilot” policies; lightweight ethics and safety reviews.

  • Post-experiment reviews focused on insights, not blame.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: analysis paralysis, opinion wars, big-bang launches.

  • Downstream hits: Constructive Risk Appetite (15), Cognitive Flexibility (21), Ship-It Bias (35), Flow Capacity (36), Ownership of Outcomes (14), Hopeful Optimism (30).


33) Feedback-Seeking Orientation

Definition (≈2 lines):
A proactive stance of inviting critique from diverse, credible sources and acting on it.
Treats feedback as a resource, not a threat.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Reduces blind spots; improves quality before scale-up.

  • Normalizes humility and continuous improvement.

  • Strengthens trust through openness and transparency.

  • Speeds convergence on what actually works for users.

Mainly shaped by

  • Structured crits, design/code reviews, user-testing panels, 360s.

  • Skills training on giving/receiving feedback; clear feedback rubrics.

  • Manager/mentor modeling (“show drafts,” “ask for a red team”).

  • Safe logging of changes made due to feedback (visible learning trails).

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: brittle ego, repeated errors, late-stage rework.

  • Downstream hits: Intellectual Humility (23), Safety to Dissent (8), Integrity & Reliability (39), Grit & Follow-Through (18), Respectful Disagreement (40), Creative Confidence (31), Narrative Coherence (48).


34) Positive-Sum Mindset

Definition (≈2 lines):
A belief that value can be created and enlarged together, not only redistributed.
Prefers partnership, knowledge sharing, and joint upside to turf wars.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Unlocks collaboration across teams, regions, and viewpoints.

  • Encourages open knowledge flows and cross-pollination.

  • Increases entrepreneurship and coalition formation.

  • Lowers defensive politics, focusing energy on making, not guarding.

Mainly shaped by

  • Joint ventures, revenue-sharing models, open-source and open-data programs.

  • Prize challenges and co-creation labs with shared IP frameworks.

  • Narratives and recognition that celebrate collaborative wins.

  • Platforms for resource pooling (talent exchanges, tool libraries).

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: hoarding, turf protection, zero-sum bargaining.

  • Downstream hits: Reciprocity & Generosity (38), Expectation of Benevolence (7), Outgroup Warmth (12), Experimentation Habit (32), Co-Elevation (42), Initiative/Proactivity (17).


35) Ship-It Bias (Completion Orientation)

Definition (≈2 lines):
A tendency to finish and release increments to real users for learning and value,
favoring cadence and fitness-for-purpose over endless polishing.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Produces real-world signal fast; reduces speculative risk.

  • Builds credibility and morale via visible progress.

  • Enables compounding improvements through short cycles.

  • Frees capacity by preventing backlog bloat and sunk-cost traps.

Mainly shaped by

  • Time-boxed sprints, clear “definition of done,” and tiny batch sizes.

  • Regular demo days; changelogs; release notes that honor learning.

  • CI/CD-like practices for knowledge work; simple acceptance criteria.

  • Governance that values momentum and post-release iteration.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: perfectionism, scope creep, shelfware, late learning.

  • Downstream hits: Grit & Follow-Through (18), Courage to Act Publicly (16), Feedback-Seeking (33), Flow Capacity (36), Narrative Coherence (48), Hopeful Optimism (30), Integrity & Reliability (39).


36) Flow Capacity (Deep Engagement)

Definition (≈2 lines):
Ability to enter sustained states of focused immersion where challenge matches skill,
time dilates, and output quality and originality rise.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Multiplies productivity and creative breakthroughs.

  • Increases quality and reduces error through deep attention.

  • Builds mastery via longer, higher-quality practice bouts.

  • Improves well-being, buffering stress and burnout.

Mainly shaped by

  • Long, protected focus blocks; reduced interruption and context switching.

  • Clear goals, immediate feedback, and autonomy over methods.

  • Ergonomic tools/environments; skill-challenge calibration and training.

  • Meeting hygiene and async norms that respect maker time.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: shallow work, constant switching, fatigue, thin craftsmanship.

  • Downstream hits: Vital Energy (28), Grit (18), Ship-It Bias (35), Creative Confidence (31), Emotion Regulation (26), Initiative/Proactivity (17), Purpose/Ikigai (43).


Group G: Prosocial Connection & Integrity


37) Warmth & Affective Empathy

Definition (≈2 lines):
Emotional attunement to others’ states and needs; the felt capacity to resonate without fusing.
Builds the interpersonal “glue” that makes cooperation natural rather than forced.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • De-escalates tensions early; conversations stay solution-oriented.

  • Increases mutual help and knowledge sharing across silos.

  • Improves product/service quality via richer user understanding.

  • Strengthens belonging and reduces social withdrawal.

Mainly shaped by (institutions/mechanisms/opportunities)

  • Social–emotional learning, mentoring, peer-support circles.

  • Volunteering/mutual-aid programs that expose real needs.

  • Storytelling & life-history exchanges; hospitable community spaces.

  • Parenting supports and caregiver literacy; kindness norms with visible recognition.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: cold, transactional ties; quick contempt; micro-aggressions.

  • Downstream hits: Belonging Security (9), Rupture–Repair (11), Reciprocity & Generosity (38), Respectful Disagreement (40), Outgroup Warmth (12), Relational Presence (24).


38) Reciprocity & Generosity

Definition (≈2 lines):
A prosocial tendency to give help, time, and know-how without immediate payback,
paired with norms that return favors over time.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Thickens trust networks; lowers contracting/monitoring costs.

  • Speeds problem-solving through rapid resource and knowledge flow.

  • Buffers shocks (people step in before systems fail).

  • Attracts collaborators; raises overall opportunity density.

Mainly shaped by

  • Mutual-aid platforms, time banks, shared tool libraries.

  • Open-source/open-data programs; cross-team office hours.

  • Public recognition of helpers; lightweight micro-grants to enable helping.

  • Simple “ask-to-offer” marketplaces; mentorship systems.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: hoarding, free-rider paranoia, brittle networks.

  • Downstream hits: Expectation of Benevolence (7), Positive-Sum Mindset (34), Initiative/Proactivity (17), Co-Elevation (42), Integrity & Reliability (39), Feedback-Seeking (33).


39) Integrity & Reliability

Definition (≈2 lines):
Alignment of word and deed; truthful communication plus consistent follow-through.
Others can plan around you because your commitments are real.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Slashes coordination overhead and supervision costs.

  • Enables bigger, longer-horizon bets across teams.

  • Increases fairness perceptions; reduces politics and spin.

  • Builds reputational capital that compounds across projects.

Mainly shaped by

  • Clear commitments and “definition of done”; visible tracking of promises.

  • Post-mortems that reward candor over face-saving.

  • Ethics education; role-modeling by seniors; consequence symmetry.

  • Simple escalation/renegotiation channels when reality shifts.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: cynicism, sandbagging, missed handoffs, chronic rework.

  • Downstream hits: Perceived Everyday Fairness (10), Expectation of Benevolence (7), Grit & Follow-Through (18), Ship-It Bias (35), Respectful Disagreement (40), Ownership of Outcomes (14).


40) Respectful Disagreement (Conflict Skill)

Definition (≈2 lines):
Ability to voice hard truths, test ideas, and negotiate tensions while preserving dignity.
Separates people from problems; favors clarity over victory.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Surfaces hidden information and risks early.

  • Reduces polarization; keeps coalitions workable across differences.

  • Improves decision quality through rigorous, non-defensive debate.

  • Deepens relationships by proving they can hold tension.

Mainly shaped by

  • Training in non-violent communication, mediation, and steel-manning.

  • Meeting charters: turn-taking, evidence standards, “disagree then commit.”

  • Facilitated retrospectives and repairs after tough calls.

  • Moderation norms in forums; calibrated debate incentives.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: avoidance, back-channeling, flame-outs, echo chambers.

  • Downstream hits: Safety to Dissent (8), Rupture–Repair (11), Perspective-Taking (20), Cognitive Flexibility (21), Belonging Security (9), Feedback-Seeking (33).


41) Admiration Capacity (Anti-Envy)

Definition (≈2 lines):
Turning others’ excellence into inspiration rather than threat; celebrating examples as shared possibility.
Channels status emotions into learning and motivation.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Creates role-model effects that raise everyone’s ceiling.

  • Lowers sabotage/tall-poppy behavior; protects visible excellence.

  • Increases knowledge transfer from exemplars (“how did you do it?”).

  • Encourages Courage to Act Publicly (16)—people aren’t afraid to shine.

Mainly shaped by

  • Recognition that honors journeys, not just outcomes; de-stigmatizing ambition.

  • Mentorship with high performers; open playbooks from successful teams.

  • Media/narratives that frame wins as community pride, not zero-sum.

  • Anti-mockery norms; swift pushback on schadenfreude.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: envy, quiet undermining, delight in others’ setbacks.

  • Downstream hits: Co-Elevation (42), Creative Confidence (31), Positive-Sum Mindset (34), Safety to Dissent (8), Courage to Act Publicly (16), Initiative/Proactivity (17).


42) Co-Elevation (Championing Others)

Definition (≈2 lines):
Proactively lifting peers—sharing credit, making introductions, opening doors, and advocating for their growth.
Treats others’ success as part of one’s own mission.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Accelerates talent development and succession strength.

  • Increases network resilience and opportunity flow.

  • Retains high performers by ensuring recognition and stretch paths.

  • Builds a cultural flywheel: generosity → trust → bigger bets → shared wins.

Mainly shaped by

  • Formal sponsorship programs (beyond mentorship); public crediting rituals.

  • Intro/referral infrastructure; shared OKRs that reward mutual success.

  • “Wins board”/changelogs that attribute contributions visibly.

  • Leadership scorecards that include how many others you’ve lifted.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: zero-sum posturing, hidden stars, brain drain.

  • Downstream hits: Belonging Security (9), Reciprocity & Generosity (38), Creative Confidence (31), Flow Capacity (36), Positive-Sum Mindset (34), Courage to Act Publicly (16), Integrity & Reliability (39).


Group H: Meaning, Direction & Resilience


43) Purpose/Ikigai Clarity

Definition (≈2 lines):
A felt alignment of strengths, values, joy, and contribution—knowing what is worth doing and why.
Transforms effort from obligation into chosen commitment.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Concentrates energy on high-meaning goals → fewer distractions, more progress.

  • Increases persistence under friction → higher completion rates and mastery.

  • Guides better opportunity selection → smarter risk-taking and learning.

  • Elevates morale and contagious enthusiasm → motivates peers and teams.

Mainly shaped by (institutions/mechanisms/opportunities)

  • Guided purpose/ikigai programs; strengths assessment and coaching.

  • Rotations, apprenticeships, and low-risk trials to “taste” roles/domains.

  • Mentorship and role-model exposure across diverse life paths.

  • Portfolio building (projects, public artifacts) with reflective debriefs.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: drifting, shallow goal-chasing, frequent pivots with little learning.

  • Downstream hits: Grit & Follow-Through (18), Flow Capacity (36), Initiative/Proactivity (17), Ship-It Bias (35), Values Congruence (44), Hopeful Optimism (30), Integrity & Reliability (39).


44) Values Congruence (Walk the Talk)

Definition (≈2 lines):
Daily behavior matches stated values; choices feel principled rather than performative.
Reduces cognitive dissonance and moral injury.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Builds personal credibility → faster trust and coordination.

  • Increases courage in hard moments (clarity beats convenience).

  • Lowers burnout from “acting against self,” sustaining energy.

  • Creates legible norms others can emulate and scale.

Mainly shaped by

  • Clarity of personal values (workshops, reflective prompts).

  • Speak-up channels and protections when values are at stake.

  • Leadership modeling principled trade-offs; transparent rationales.

  • Freedom to refuse misaligned tasks; option to renegotiate commitments.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: moral fatigue, cynicism, quiet quitting, reputation erosion.

  • Downstream hits: Integrity & Reliability (39), Safety to Dissent (8), Courage to Act Publicly (16), Belonging Security (9), Narrative Coherence (48), Emotion Regulation (26).


45) Growth Mindset & Antifragility

Definition (≈2 lines):
Seeing ability as improvable; using stressors and setbacks to emerge stronger.
Prefers learning curves over static labels.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Normalizes experimentation → more discovery with less shame.

  • Increases bounce-forward after failure → sustained innovation pace.

  • Reduces blame; redirects attention to process improvement.

  • Encourages ambitious goals and patient skill-building.

Mainly shaped by

  • Assessment that rewards revision and progress (portfolios, retakes).

  • Blameless retrospectives; “failure showcases” with extracted lessons.

  • Stretch assignments with coaching and psychological safety.

  • Public modeling of updates (“I was wrong; here’s what we changed”).

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: avoidance of challenge, brittle identity, status preservation over truth.

  • Downstream hits: Experimentation Habit (32), Constructive Risk Appetite (15), Distress Tolerance (27), Feedback-Seeking (33), Grit (18), Cognitive Flexibility (21), Hopeful Optimism (30).


46) Gratitude & Savoring

Definition (≈2 lines):
Habitual noticing and appreciating of what is working, who helped, and small wins.
Broadens attention from scarcity/vigilance to resources/possibility.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Increases prosocial behavior and reciprocity; reduces envy.

  • Buffers stress and improves mood → better collaboration and creativity.

  • Reinforces effective behaviors by making progress salient.

  • Deepens relationships through visible acknowledgment.

Mainly shaped by

  • Rituals: gratitude rounds, “wins of the week,” public thank-yous.

  • Recognition systems that spotlight helpfulness and contribution.

  • Reflection prompts (journals, team debriefs) that catalog progress.

  • Storytelling spaces where contributions are named and celebrated.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: scarcity fixation, chronic comparison, muted morale.

  • Downstream hits: Admiration Capacity (41), Reciprocity & Generosity (38), Positive-Sum Mindset (34), Vital Energy (28), Hopeful Optimism (30), Co-Elevation (42).


47) Awe & Transcendence Sensitivity

Definition (≈2 lines):
Openness to experiences larger than the self—nature, art, science, service—that shrink ego and widen perspective.
Invites humility, connection, and renewed meaning.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Lowers self-focus → more curiosity, empathy, and collaboration.

  • Sparks creativity through perspective shifts and sense of possibility.

  • Encourages stewardship and long-term thinking.

  • Softens rigid convictions → easier belief updates and dialogue.

Mainly shaped by

  • Access to nature, public art, music, museums, science outreach.

  • Communal rituals and service projects that highlight shared purpose.

  • Time/space for contemplation (quiet rooms, retreats, reflection days).

  • Education that integrates wonder (astronomy nights, maker exhibits).

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: narrow horizons, cynicism, status preoccupation, polarization.

  • Downstream hits: Intellectual Humility (23), Positive-Sum Mindset (34), Perspective-Taking (20), Purpose/Ikigai (43), Creative Confidence (31), Emotion Regulation (26).


48) Narrative Coherence (Life Story Integration)

Definition (≈2 lines):
Making sense of one’s past, present, and intended future as a meaningful arc.
Weaves setbacks into identity growth rather than shame.

How it serves a healthy, proactive, creative society

  • Stabilizes identity and motivation through adversity.

  • Guides consistent choices aligned with long-term aims.

  • Increases resilience and reduces rumination after setbacks.

  • Enhances mentorship—people can articulate lessons and pass them on.

Mainly shaped by

  • Life-story workshops, reflective writing, coaching/therapy access.

  • Rites of passage and milestone acknowledgments (public and private).

  • Portfolio narratives linking projects to evolving purpose/values.

  • Spaces for sharing personal trajectories without stigma.

If not maximized: symptoms & knock-on effects

  • Symptoms: fragmentation, looping on past hurts, incoherent pivots.

  • Downstream hits: Identity Coherence (4), Purpose/Ikigai (43), Hopeful Optimism (30), Grit (18), Emotion Regulation (26), Self-Compassion (3), Values Congruence (44).