The Green Flags Quiz

What emotional safety looks like—so you can stop second-guessing it

Why This Tool Matters

When you’ve been hurt, safety can feel unfamiliar.

You might mistrust calm, kindness, or consistency—

especially if chaos was your normal.

This tool helps you name the behaviors that build emotional safety—

so you can stop questioning care that’s actually real.

✅ COMMON GREEN FLAGS

These aren’t just “nice” behaviors.

They’re signs of emotional maturity and real connection.

  • They listen without interrupting or fixing
  • They respect your boundaries—without punishment
  • They’re consistent in how they show up
  • They can handle feedback without collapsing or attacking
  • They take responsibility for their impact
  • They don’t need to dominate to feel secure
  • They offer support, not pressure
  • They apologize with action, not just words
  • They celebrate your independence—not resent it

Green flags build nervous system safety.

They let you relax into yourself.

🧭 How to Use This Tool

Use this tool to:

  • Recalibrate your internal sense of what’s safe
  • Recognize when you’re actually okay—not just waiting for harm
  • Build a clearer emotional map for choosing partners, friends, or spaces

This is your new emotional baseline.

🧠 Notes for Neurodivergent Folks

If you were raised in unpredictable or unsafe environments,

you may confuse calm for danger—or chaos for passion.

This tool is here to help retrain your body to recognize safe as safe.

Your system may need practice—but safety is something you can learn to feel.

💛 Final Words

You deserve relationships that feel steady.

That hold space for your truth.

That never use love as leverage.

Green flags won’t chase you.

They’ll wait with you.

And they’ll never make you shrink.

Let this tool remind you:

Safe love exists—and you don’t have to earn it by suffering.

🎬

Little Women

(2019)

Theme: Steady love and emotional respect

Laurie and Jo’s friendship, and Marmee’s presence, offer powerful examples of support without pressure, respect for autonomy, and love that doesn’t demand compliance.

These are green flags in motion—especially in how the characters hold space through disagreement and growth.

🎬

The Secret Life of Bees

(2008)

Theme: Safe homes after harm

When Lily enters the Boatwrights’ home, she slowly learns what emotional safety feels like—consistency, kindness, truth without cruelty.

This story shows how green flags rebuild a nervous system that’s only known fear.

🎬

The Florida Project

(2017) – The Motel Manager

Theme: Quiet, steady safety in unlikely places

The manager offers care without performance—just stable presence, small acts of kindness, and emotional availability.

He doesn’t fix everything, but he creates a pocket of peace.

Sometimes, that’s what safety looks like: not perfect—but consistent.

The Emotional Blueprint © Anna Paretas 2025 – All Rights Reserved

This is a living document. Please cite responsibly.

www.blueprint.emotionalblueprint.org ┃ annaparetas@emotionalblueprint.org