Not a clinician. Not a support. Someone who lived inside a broken system long enough to map every exit and then built the tools she needed to get out.
I grew up in a dysregulated family system. Not the kind you talk about once and walk away from feeling validated. The kind that rewires you at the level of your nervous system before you're old enough to understand what's happening.
I spent years doing what people like me do. Pattern-mapping without knowing that's what I was doing. Reading rooms. Tracking behavior. Figuring out which version of myself kept me safe in which situation. I thought it was just how I survived. Turns out it was the beginning of a framework.
About two years ago something accelerated. The metacognitive awareness I'd always had went from background noise to the loudest thing in the room. I started documenting what I was seeing. Then I went looking for research that could give language to it: neuroscience, epigenetics, attachment literature, trauma theory.
So I built the language.
Five frameworks. One thesis. Window of tolerance compression shaped by genetics, epigenetics, and environment produces the patterns Unscarred maps. The labels come later. The mechanism comes first.
I'm not a clinician. I don't diagnose. I don't treat. I operate in psychoeducation and I'm explicit about that.
What I am is someone who spent 32 years inside the patterns I teach about. Who mapped them obsessively before she had words for them. Who then found the research language that helped make the map teachable.
That's a different kind of authority. Not better or worse than clinical training. Different. Lived experience plus systematic pattern mapping plus research-grounded psychoeducation.
Take the quiz. Read the framework. Find your mask. The map works whether you start at the beginning or land in the middle.