Book 2 · Child Page
Calibration active
Calibration
contact → feedback → adjustment → alignment
The interface shows what is happening. Calibration is what changes before distortion becomes structure.
This page belongs under Interface Layer. The parent page shows where the system meets the world; this page shows how the Operator adjusts when contact answers back.
▸ Open MaxCP
▸ ◉ Key Insight
Adjustment at contact maintains alignment. Ignoring feedback preserves distortion.
Feedback is instruction now, not homework for later.
▸ ⚡ Mantras
- Read → adjust → read again.
- Do not defend the move.
- Feedback is instruction.
- Correction is continuous.
- If you see it, you change it.
- Contact calibrates.
▸ ↺ Flowchart
Act → observe interface.
Mismatch appears → pause defense.
Distortion appears → adjust immediately.
Resistance increases → reduce cost.
Signal breaks → simplify the move.
Re-contact → observe again.
Alignment stabilizes → settle.
▸ ⌘ Micro-Lexicon
- Calibration — adjustment in response to observable feedback at contact.
- Mismatch — divergence between intended effect and actual field response.
- Feedback — response from the interface after movement.
- Alignment — coherence between internal posture, external move, and field response.
- CIP — the live loop at the interface.
- 浮 — the re-read that prevents defense from replacing correction.
Entry
You act.
The interface responds.
The response may confirm alignment.
Or it may show mismatch.
Calibration begins the moment the field answers.
Calibration Doors
This child page has four doors. Use the one that matches what contact has revealed.
Contact Read
Observe what actually appeared at the interface, not what the move was supposed to produce.
Mismatch
Identify where intended effect and field response diverged before explanation enters.
Adjust
Reduce cost, simplify signal, shift timing, or stop the move before distortion compounds.
Stabilize
Re-contact, re-read, and settle only after alignment holds in the field.
Contact gives the read. Mismatch names the break. Adjustment changes the move. Stabilization proves the correction held.
Orientation Stream
Contact, Feedback, Mismatch, Adjustment, Re-contact, Alignment
Contact
The point where movement enters the field and becomes observable.
Feedback
The field’s response after contact. It may confirm, distort, resist, or reveal new cost.
Mismatch
The gap between intended effect and actual response.
Adjustment
The move changes in response to what the field showed.
Re-contact
The adjusted move returns to the interface and receives another field answer.
Alignment
Internal posture, external movement, and field response begin to cohere.
The Error
You act.
The interface responds.
You explain instead of correcting.
Explanation is not calibration. Explanation may clarify later, but at contact it often becomes defense wearing a lanyard.
Feedback Is Instruction
The interface is not feedback for later.
It is instruction now.
If the field has already shown mismatch, continued explanation preserves distortion.
You stop defending the move.
You follow the feedback.
Adjustment becomes immediate.
There is no delay between read and change.
If you see it, you change it.
Operational Rule
Distortion Appears
Adjust. Do not justify the original move while the field is already showing damage.
Resistance Increases
Reduce cost. Resistance is data at the interface, not proof that the Agent is wrong.
Signal Breaks
Simplify the move. If the signal cannot be read, the interaction cannot stabilize.
Delay preserves distortion.
Correction must occur at the moment of mismatch.
Waiting converts feedback into noise.
Calibration Is Not Overcorrection
Calibration changes what the field showed needed changing.
It does not panic-swap the whole plan, flood the field with new moves, or apologize the structure into mush.
Adjustment must stay proportional.
One change.
Then re-contact.
Then read again.
Calibration is precision, not flailing with better intentions.
CIP Calibration Loop
Calibration is CIP under pressure: read contact, release one adjustment, re-read the field, and settle only when the correction holds.
吞 — Read Contact
Receive what the field actually shows.
吐 — One Adjustment
Change exactly one thing in response.
浮 — Re-Read
Watch what shifted because of the adjustment.
沉 — Settle
Drop the prior move only after the field stabilizes.
BRIG at Contact
Calibration does not always mean another active move.
Sometimes the correction is to Brush, not Repair.
Sometimes the correction is to refuse continuation.
Sometimes the correction is to hold in read because the field has not authorized another move.
Calibration must remain governed.
If the adjustment adds cost, steals agency, blocks exit, or stacks moves to protect the Operator’s pride, it is not calibration.
Stabilization
The adjusted move returns to contact.
The field answers again.
If distortion drops, signal clears, cost lowers, and agency remains intact, the correction may be holding.
If the field becomes harder to read, you added noise.
Alignment is not the Operator feeling better.
Alignment is the field showing cleaner contact after the adjustment.
Pattern Hints
Use these when contact starts producing more explanation than adjustment. The field is not asking for a press conference.
Start with observables. What changed in body, timing, attention, resistance, access, distance, or signal?
One adjustment only. Change signal, timing, distance, cost, or exit. Do not empty the toolbox onto the field.
Re-read. The correction is only real if the field shows reduced distortion, clearer signal, preserved agency, or lower cost.
CTA Rail
Calibration keeps the system aligned at contact. Return to the interface, test whether the correction carries, then move forward only with what survives.