The theory of identity metabolization advanced in Morgan (2026a) demonstrates that successful reorganization following identity rupture depends on a recursive system of capacities engaged under conditions of liminal instability. The present paper extends that analysis by examining cases in which rupture does not result in reorganization. Drawing on six negative cases spanning music, activism, conceptual art, entrepreneurship, and organizational leadership, this paper advances a conditional model of metabolization failure: the claim that failure is not simply the absence of metabolization capacity (the capacity to engage and integrate destabilizing experience), but a structured interaction between capacity and environmental condition. Five failure modes are identified through a negative-case cross-case analysis of six individuals: truncation, overwhelm, rejection, interrupted metabolization, and substitution, each produced by a distinct configuration of metabolization capacity (the individual's ability to engage and integrate destabilizing experience) and environmental condition type. Three closure pathways follow: fragmentation, withdrawal or silence, and premature closure. These findings extend the primary model by introducing a conditional framework in which metabolization requires both individual capacity and environmental permission to engage. The analysis reframes non-reorganization not as individual failure but as a structured and potentially preventable outcome, with direct implications for how threshold conditions are understood and supported across leadership, organizational, and leader formation contexts. Together, the two papers in this series establish that transformation under threshold conditions is jointly determined by what an individual carries into the liminal period and what the environment permits.
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David S. Morgan (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d0af83659487ece0fa58bd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19387016
David S. Morgan
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