Mechanism,
not symptom
Most therapy teaches you to manage what's happening. This work changes why it happens. The difference between treating fever and finding the source of infection.
Structural work with traumatic patterns. For people who've spent years in therapy — and are still waiting for the change to be real.
Most therapy teaches you to manage what's happening. This work changes why it happens. The difference between treating fever and finding the source of infection.
You will know every intervention, every stage, every marker of progress. No black box. You're not a passenger in your own treatment.
Support is available everywhere. Structural change requires something different: a defined target, a method, and the willingness to use both.
“If therapy has been helping you cope for years — that's not a result. That's Plan B that became permanent.”
Years of therapy. Progress that doesn't hold. You know the vocabulary — the patterns are still running.
High-functioning, high cost. No one would know by looking. You know.
You want structure, not drift. A defined process. Measurable markers. An endpoint in view.
Ready for the work, not just the conversation. Willing to engage with what's uncomfortable.
You're looking for emotional support without structural change.
You're in acute crisis requiring emergency psychiatric care.
You expect results without active engagement in the process.
You're looking for someone to validate what you already believe.
Trauma responses repeat because the nervous system runs a program, not a memory. Before the work can begin, the architecture needs to be visible.
The Pattern Map is a short diagnostic tool — not diagnostic in the clinical sense, but structural. Five minutes. One clear picture of where the loop locks.
Two validated clinical instruments. Not diagnostic — directional. A starting point before the conversation.
Measures subjective distress caused by a specific traumatic event across three dimensions: intrusion, avoidance, and hyperarousal.
“Any reminder brought back feelings about it.”
A 20-item self-report measure that assesses the DSM-5 symptom criteria for PTSD across four symptom clusters.
“Repeated, disturbing, and unwanted memories of the stressful experience.”
The distinction isn't semantic. Understanding this changes everything about the direction of treatment.
Coping strategies are triage. Competent triage. But triage was never meant to become the discharge plan.
You hold a job, maintain relationships, seem fine. The symptom profile just happens to look like a personality.
Researcher and practitioner specialising in traumatic stress, complex PTSD, and the intersection of addiction with chronic trauma. Developed the Mental Engineering method — a structured, protocol-based approach to traumatic pattern interruption.
Works with clients who have extensive prior therapy histories. The clinical focus is not on what happened — but on the mechanism that keeps running after the event is long past.
The first session is diagnostic — not a commitment, not a pitch. A structured conversation to determine whether this work makes sense for your situation. And if it doesn't, where to look instead.