Before intervening, can you read whether the next move will actually land?
A clinically correct intervention can still fail — not because it was wrong, but because the
moment was not ready to receive it. Clinical Integrability gives clinicians a language for that
judgment: a way, before intervening, to read whether the next move can become integrable
now.
DDSRF (Dual-Domain Subjective Reality Formation) is a shared language for clinical thinking
— a grammar of subjective reality, sequence, and change. Clinical Integrability presents the
DDSRF Method & Atlas for clinicians, supervisors, teachers, and researchers across
therapeutic orientations. The focus is case formulation, sequence, and the conditions under
which an intervention becomes usable.
The book works in two registers. The Main Text develops the architecture — how subjective
reality forms, how salience and fit shape what can be received, and the sequence by which
change becomes possible. The Method Atlas turns it into working instruments for reading
the clinical moment: a case card, a mode grid, configuration families, and practical criteria.
Written for working therapists, supervisors, clinical educators, advanced trainees, and
researchers, this is a professional and educational text — not popular psychotherapy
reading.
DDSRF supports clinical thinking. It is not a therapy school, not a diagnostic system, not a
treatment protocol, and not an AI engine for clinical decision-making. It is a grammar for
clinical thinking — and a way to ask, before every intervention, whether this is the move that
can be integrated now.