Failure to restore balance may require further action

From We Are Ts'msyen
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Failure to Restore Balance May Require Further Action

Template:PageStatus Template:Category

Purpose

This entry records that when harm has been acknowledged but balance is not restored, further action may be required. Restoration is measured by balance achieved, not by intent or participation alone.

General principle

Failure to restore balance may require further action. Unresolved imbalance cannot be ignored.

Action responds to continued imbalance, not to punishment.

When further action is required

Further action may be required when:

  • Responsibility is acknowledged but repair is incomplete
  • Accountability is avoided or withdrawn
  • Harm continues or repeats
  • Imbalance persists despite attempted restoration
  • Trust remains damaged

Participation alone does not complete restoration. Outcome matters.

Nature of further action

Further action remains guided by ayaawx. It is proportional, restrained, and relational.

Further action may include:

  • Additional repair or compensation
  • Extended service or obligation
  • Renewed acknowledgment
  • Expanded witnessing
  • Temporary limits on roles or authority
  • Other actions appropriate to restore balance

Further action does not default to exclusion or punishment. It seeks completion of restoration.

Authority and restraint

Elders may guide further action. Guidance is offered, not imposed.

Restraint remains essential. Excessive response creates new imbalance.

Relationship to responsibility

Further action arises from unmet responsibility. It does not create new guilt or shame.

Responsibility continues until balance is restored. Completion, not compliance, marks resolution.

Continuity

Unresolved imbalance weakens law and trust. Addressed imbalance strengthens continuity.

Law remains active until balance is restored.

Cross references