Ecliptogenic

Ecliptogenic refers to the origin of a system/collective comprised of ecliptives, or the origin of an ecliptive. An ecliptogenic system was previously a singlet before breaking up into alters or fragments/parts. This initial split can be voluntary or involuntary and occur at any time, but an involuntary split may be induced (e.g. by trauma, dissociation, stress, etc). Ecliptogenic systems may have an endurative or core, alongside other headmates who may or may not play specific roles or be introjects.

The non-endurative ecliptogenic parts can be any amount of distinct/indistinct from the core or the previous single self, and can have shared consciousness/memory or be partitionary. Some or all parts may or may not also identify at least partially with the previous single identity and/or the body despite not being enduratives. Much like many other systems, parts can split off, form, be created, or be absorbed into/fuse with others over time after the initial split.

Ecliptogenic systems can fall under the traumagenic and/or endogenic umbrellas. Ecliptogenic systems can be anywhere along the singlet-plural spectrum and may identify as median/midcontimuum, plural singlet/plurallet, mediple, mesosian, parasian, diversian, varion, etc. Ecliptogenics may or may not also identify as systems/plurals. The ecliptogenic label could also apply to sisasystems, subsystems, and/or sidesystems.

Related Terms
An ecliptive is any part/headmate that split off from the original member.

An endurative is a part/headmate that retains the system's previous singlet identity. This part may or may not identify as the system's core or host.