What it measures
The Readiness Score doesn't measure whether you're "ready" in the motivational sense. It measures which resistance pattern is active—because until you can name the disguise, you can't lower it.
The diagnostic maps your answers across four dimensions and routes you to the specific disguise profile that's operating. Each disguise has a distinct signature, and the instrument is calibrated to distinguish between them.
The five patterns it detects
The Research Loop
Your thoroughness has become the activity that replaces the decision. You have enough information. You had enough six months ago.
The Conditions Stack
Your prudence has built a list of prerequisites that can never be fully satisfied. When one condition is met, another appears.
The Proxy Vote
Your consideration for others has outsourced your decision to someone who may not even know they're holding it.
The Identity Shield
Your self-knowledge has become a wall that makes every alternative feel like a diminishment rather than an expansion.
The Noble Sacrifice
Your selflessness has constructed a narrative in which your own crossing would come at someone else's expense. Your immobility feels moral.
How it works
Fifteen questions. Each is designed to activate the specific language and reasoning patterns associated with one of the Five Disguises. Your answers aren't scored on a simple scale—they're pattern-matched against the disguise profiles.
The output names which disguise is primary, explains how it's operating, and connects you to the relevant section of the threshold crossing framework.
The Readiness Score is not a personality test. It's a diagnostic instrument built for a specific purpose: surfacing which of your strengths has degraded into the thing that's holding you at your threshold.
Free · 15 questions · About 3 minutes
For practitioners
If you're a financial planner, coach, or therapist, the Readiness Score can be deployed as a client intake tool. It surfaces the disguise profile before you begin deep purpose work—establishing the cleared signal that makes questions like the Kinder questions produce honest answers instead of the disguise's performance.
Practitioner documentation and integration details are covered in The Second Clock (for financial planners) and The Strength Trap (for coaches and therapists).