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rlsk-relationship-analysis
Analyze and improve relationships by identifying parties, assessing state, surfacing unmet needs, and finding actionable patterns.
用 Codex 或 Claude 帮你安装 复制这段 Prompt,粘贴到 Codex、Claude 或其他助手里,让它检查 Skill 页面并帮你完成安装。
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Analyze and improve relationships by identifying parties, assessing state, surfacing unmet needs, and finding actionable patterns.
用 Codex 或 Claude 帮你安装 复制这段 Prompt,粘贴到 Codex、Claude 或其他助手里,让它检查 Skill 页面并帮你完成安装。
基于 SOC 职业分类
Route any input through a branching question tree to narrow down the optimal response strategy before writing. Two stages — PERCEIVE (classify input) then ACT (select response). Covers all prompt types.
Generate exhaustive guesses about user input using ALL search methods with coverage tracking. Guessing is SEARCH through possibility space. Tracks space created vs space covered to ensure comprehensive exploration.
Systematically evaluate and select from a set of guesses, options, or possibilities. Combines ARAW analysis with prioritization to determine which guesses are strong, weak, actionable, or eliminable.
Extract hidden assumptions from any content. Surfaces what must be true for claims to hold, enabling deeper analysis.
Sub-orchestrator for analytical requests. Routes to decomposition, systems analysis, comparison, risk assessment, or synthesis based on what kind of analysis is needed.
Assume Right - Deep recursive rightness search. For every claim, assume it's right — find what must follow, then assume THOSE implications are right too. Recurse until bedrock. Track every claim found.
| name | rlsk - Relationship Analysis |
| description | Analyze and improve relationships by identifying parties, assessing state, surfacing unmet needs, and finding actionable patterns. |
| output | {"format":"prose"} |
Input: $ARGUMENTS
PARTY A: [name / role / description]
PARTY B: [name / role / description]
ADDITIONAL PARTIES: [if any]
RELATIONSHIP TYPE: [professional | personal | familial | community | transactional]
Name each party concretely. "The team" is too vague — which team, in what role relative to whom?
Rate the relationship on these dimensions:
TRUST: [high | medium | low | broken]
COMMUNICATION: [open | guarded | one-directional | absent]
HISTORY: [new | developing | established | deep | deteriorating]
OVERALL STATE: [healthy | strained | new | deep | conflicted | distant]
EVIDENCE: [what observable behaviors support this assessment]
Use behavioral evidence, not feelings. "They don't respond to messages for days" is evidence. "I think they're upset" is interpretation.
For each party:
PARTY [A/B] NEEDS:
1. [need] — EVIDENCE: [how you know this need exists]
2. [need] — EVIDENCE: [behavioral signal]
3. [need] — EVIDENCE: [behavioral signal]
Look for needs across these categories:
UNMET NEEDS:
1. [party] needs [X] but is getting [Y instead]
IMPACT: [what this gap causes]
2. [party] needs [X] but [reason it's unmet]
IMPACT: [observable consequence]
Unmet needs drive many relationship problems. But some conflicts are genuine disagreements about values or incompatible goals — not symptoms of anything. Check whether the conflict is a needs gap or a real disagreement before defaulting to the needs frame.
POSITIVE PATTERN: [description]
TRIGGER: [what initiates it]
EFFECT: [what it produces]
FREQUENCY: [how often it occurs]
NEGATIVE PATTERN: [description]
TRIGGER: [what initiates it]
CYCLE: [how it escalates or repeats]
COST: [what damage it does each time]
Describe the actual pattern you observe first, THEN check if it matches a named pattern. The observation comes before the label.
Look for: pursue-withdraw cycles, criticism-defensiveness loops, assumption cascades, score-keeping, avoidance spirals.
ACTIONS FOR [PARTY A]:
1. [specific action] — ADDRESSES: [which unmet need]
WHEN: [timing or trigger for doing this]
2. [specific action] — ADDRESSES: [which pattern to interrupt]
HOW: [concrete steps]
ACTIONS FOR [PARTY B]:
1. [specific action] — ADDRESSES: [which unmet need]
2. [specific action] — ADDRESSES: [which pattern]
SHARED ACTIONS:
1. [joint action] — CREATES: [what new dynamic]
Actions must be specific and behavioral. "Communicate better" is not an action. "Share one concern per week in a dedicated 20-minute conversation" is an action.
| Failure | Signal | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Taking sides | Analysis favors one party | Re-examine from the other party's perspective |
| Feelings without evidence | "They feel X" without observable basis | Ground every assessment in behavior |
| Vague advice | "Be more open" | Specify the exact action, timing, and context |
| Ignoring power dynamics | Treating unequal relationships as equal | Name the power differential explicitly |
| Single-cause thinking | Blaming one factor | Relationship problems are always multi-causal |
/agsk to analyze arguments occurring within the relationship/sysk to map the relationship as a system with feedback loops/gflr to identify what's missing from the relationship/emotion when feelings point to a relationship issue/sysk: rlsk focuses on interpersonal dynamics; sysk focuses on structural components