Show your map to another person
It lets someone review your synthesis, areas, tensions, and applications without entering your main account.
Sharing a profile lets you open a guided reading with another person without losing access control. You can allow reading, export, or methodological interaction depending on the goal of the relationship.
This is not a social add-on. The feature exists to turn a profile into a shared work tool, a careful comparison device, or a support workflow with clear boundaries.
It lets someone review your synthesis, areas, tensions, and applications without entering your main account.
When interaction is enabled, the shared profile can be used as the base for crossings, pattern contrast, and one-to-one exercises.
It can help you arrive better prepared to an important conversation, a professional review, or a joint exploration with someone you trust.
The basic flow is: choose who to share with, define the access scope, decide whether they can export or interact, and add an expiration date if needed.
SELFTRACE can also generate read-only public pieces. They are not designed as an open social network, but as a sober viewer to share a specific reading by token or show it in Traces, a curated space.
A well-used shared profile can better organize a work relationship, a therapeutic conversation, mentoring, a couple exploration, or a professional review of behavior.
A shared profile supports reading and relational exercises, but not identity fusion, definitive judgments, or simplistic averages between people.
The right idea is this: sharing opens a better structured conversation; it does not replace judgment, context, or personal responsibility.
Use it to validate the current layer before opening communities or comments.