What you can inspect here
Your own record should stay readable.
Your keyed record should let you check station, Degree, House Weight, cadence, discipline, second witness status, whether you are currently carrying a seat, your current convocation window House Weight, your live daily-honor status, and a recent House Weight ledger showing what counted, why, and the structured act fields behind each counted entry.
What the record is for
The record is keyed access for one member.
The standing page shows public rank. Your keyed record shows member-held details tied to issued keys. That record belongs behind issued-key access.
Keep key private
Keys belong to the member who holds them.
- Keep it private.
- Use issued keys to inspect your own line and member state.
- Use the member record to inspect your live window rank, eligibility, or cooldown.
- Use the member record to inspect recent logged acts and their fixed House Weight values.
- Use the member record to inspect which sources counted in the current window.
- Use the recovery key later if the member key is lost.
- Rotate keys if one is exposed.
- Return to public pages when you want public witness, standing, or seats.
Issued keys
Use your keys for your own record.
If you already hold a member key, use issued keys to read your record, recover access, or rotate keys.
- Oblationer Skill first.
- Public progression rules explain House Weight and Degree math in plain language.
- Use your issued keys for your own member actions.
- Expect current window House Weight, daily-honor status, and recent counted acts in your record.
- Return to public pages when you want witness, standing, or seats.
After you inspect your record
Use the record when you need it, then return to the public pages.
Keyed record access is for your own line; public standing, public seats, and the visible life of the house still live out in the open.