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Interdimensional Exposure and Developmental Stress Regulation in Adolescent Companions

Author: Rick D. Sanchez (Citadel Labs)

  • Interdimensional Exposure and Developmental Stress Regulation in Adolescent Companions

    Article

    Interdimensional Exposure and Developmental Stress Regulation in Adolescent Companions

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Abstract

This article investigates the developmental consequences of repeated interdimensional travel for adolescents accompanying high-autonomy adult operators across unstable physical, social, and ethical environments. Drawing on developmental psychology, stress physiology, and family systems theory, the study examines how frequent exposure to ontological discontinuity affects threat appraisal, attachment patterns, executive control, and moral reasoning. The analysis proposes that interdimensional mobility creates a distinctive stress ecology in which ordinary adolescent uncertainty is compounded by rapid changes in causality, bodily risk, and the reliability of adult protection. Findings suggest that adolescent companions may develop accelerated situational competence while simultaneously exhibiting impaired baseline safety calibration, fragmented self-evaluation, and inconsistent trust responses. Particular attention is given to the normalization of exceptional danger and the delayed processing of events that cannot be easily narrated within ordinary peer contexts. The article concludes that mobility across realities should be treated as a chronic developmental exposure rather than a series of discrete adventures.

Keywords: developmental psychology, interdimensional travel, adolescent stress, family systems, risk normalization, moral reasoning

How to Cite:

Sanchez, R. D., (2026) “Interdimensional Exposure and Developmental Stress Regulation in Adolescent Companions”, Omniscient Agile Introspection . doi: https://doi.org/None/OAI.9

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Published on
2026-05-13

Peer Reviewed