Problem of Basic Trust

'Trust is not tangible. It arises from expectations, repeated experiences, social cues and the interpretation of intentions.
In low-contextual thinking, this process is often difficult, leaving basic trust fragile.

Difficulties in low-contextual thinking

Examples

Casus

A friend doesn't reply to a message once. The low-contextual person immediately concludes: "He is no longer interested." There is no room to consider context (busy, forgetting, other priority). Confidence collapses immediately.

Casus

A partner says "I trust you." The low-contextual person only experiences this at that moment. Because there is difficulty with timelines and linking behavior over the longer term, this trust must be explicitly confirmed again and again.

Trust over time

Essentially, trust builds through:

Because low-contextual people have difficulty with this type of integration, they experience trust as something that needs to be restored over and over again.
Basic trust is therefore difficult to establish, and remains vulnerable in the event of minor disruptions.

Further

See also personality disorders for the consequences of fragile basic trust in the DSM classifications.