PRINCIPLES & STANDARDS OF PROPER ENGAGEMENT

GREETING OF PEACE

Welcome.

These principles are intended to promote peace, clarity, proper conduct, accountability, and mutual understanding in all communications, relationships, agreements, and other interactions.

The following principles serve as the basis for proper engagement among all participating parties.

PRINCIPLES OF PROPER ENGAGEMENT

  • Good Faith

  • Truth

  • Clarity

  • Capacity

  • Responsibility

  • Accountability

  • Honor

  • Integrity

STANDARDS OF PROPER ENGAGEMENT

• Communicate honestly and in good faith.

• Exercise reasonable care in communication and conduct.

• Seek clarification before making assumptions.

• Respect boundaries, agreements, and responsibilities.

• Correct errors, misunderstandings, or miscommunications when discovered.

• Provide clear notice when notice is reasonably required.

• Pursue peaceful resolution whenever reasonably possible.

• Respect privacy, stewardship, and the right of any party to peacefully disengage.

CAPACITY & RESPONSIBILITY

A man, woman, individual, or organization may interact in various capacities, including personal, private, business, fiduciary, representative, administrative, professional, or official capacities.

Clarity regarding the subject, capacity, relationship, and context involved helps prevent misunderstanding and supports proper communication, agreements, and relationships.

CONTEXT & CLARITY

Clear communication begins with proper identification of the subject, capacity, relationship, and context involved.

To reduce misunderstanding, presumption, and assumption, participating parties are encouraged to seek clarification regarding the role, capacity, purpose, and context of any communication, correspondence, agreement, transaction, or other interaction before drawing conclusions or taking action.

Where uncertainty exists, clarification is preferred over assumption.

i am that i am; by: jeremy dylan creager

© Copyright 2026. JEREMY DYLAN CREAGER. All Rights Reserved. Executed in the Private Domain