Question
How do I practice schema integration failure?
Quick Answer
Take two schemas you currently hold that feel contradictory — maybe 'I should plan carefully' and 'I should trust my intuition.' Write each one out fully, including the contexts where it works best and the evidence supporting it. Now attempt to integrate them. Write down your first integration.
The most direct way to practice schema integration failure is through a focused exercise: Take two schemas you currently hold that feel contradictory — maybe 'I should plan carefully' and 'I should trust my intuition.' Write each one out fully, including the contexts where it works best and the evidence supporting it. Now attempt to integrate them. Write down your first integration attempt. Then check: did you actually preserve both schemas, or did you quietly drop the inconvenient parts of one to make the other fit? If your integration doesn't account for the full complexity of both originals, you've committed at least one of the failure modes in this lesson.
Common pitfall: Reading this lesson and concluding that integration is too dangerous to attempt. The failure modes described here are not reasons to avoid integration — they are specific, diagnosable errors that you can learn to detect and correct. The goal is not to stop integrating. The goal is to integrate well, which requires knowing the ways integration goes wrong.
This practice connects to Phase 20 (Schema Integration) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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