A philosophy and a science are meaningless without a method. This is our rigorous, repeatable, and teachable system for facilitating insight and creating change. It is an evidence-based framework designed to deconstruct the old model and build a new, more humane one.
We use this tool not as a test, but as a flashlight. A deep dive into how we use this nuanced, real-world measure of executive function to illuminate the specific points of friction in a person’s daily life.
A guide to understanding how we map a person’s unique sensory landscape. This is the first step in deconstructing meltdowns, shutdowns, and burnout by honoring the body’s reality.
Our method for the interview itself. We start with a single, open-ended question and follow the narrative threads to uncover the deep, authentic story of a person’s life. This is the art of collaborative investigation.
Insight is one thing; action is another. This is our process for translating the “why” of the assessment into the practical, “how” of daily life, co-designing accommodations that actually work.
The assessment is not a test; it is the first act of therapy. This is our philosophy on how a collaborative, compassionate, and transparent assessment process can be profoundly healing in and of itself.
No. While this model was architected from the ground up to meet the complex needs of neurodivergent individuals who have been failed by the traditional system, its core principles are universally human. It is, at its heart, a trauma-informed, strengths-based, and neurobiologically-grounded approach. It is profoundly effective for anyone with a history of complex trauma, anyone who has felt chronically misunderstood, or anyone who is simply tired of the pathologizing bulls*hit of the mainstream mental health world. It’s a human-affirming model, period.
The full Enlitens Interview, from start to finish, is typically conducted over two or three sessions, which is standard for most comprehensive psychological assessments. The beauty of the modular design, however, is its flexibility. You don’t always need to run the entire protocol. A skilled clinician can pull out a single module—like the “Social Debrief” or the “Cognitive Walk-Through”—to use as a powerful, targeted intervention within a standard 50-minute therapy session. The full interview is a deep dive; the individual modules are tactical tools for everyday use.
Fuck no. The names, the science, the theory—that’s all for you, the clinician. It’s the essential knowledge you need to understand the “why” behind what you’re doing. For the client, the language should be simple, human, and collaborative. You’d never say, “Now I’m going to conduct a phenomenological inquiry.” You’d say, “Let’s set aside the story for a second. What was that feeling like in your body?” The model gives you the expert foundation; your own humanity provides the delivery.
Take one second. That’s all I’m asking.
Do not try to “calm down.” Do not try to “fix it.” Do not listen to the voice screaming that you need to do something right now.
Just be here, with me, for one single breath.
My name is Liz. I’ve spent years working overnight in the ER, sitting with people on what was often the worst night of their entire lives. I have sat in the eye of the hurricane, and I can tell you with absolute certainty that the chaos you feel right now is not the truth.
It is a storm in your nervous system. And a storm is just a weather pattern. It is not you. It is not permanent. And you do not have to navigate it alone.
Right now, your brain’s alarm system is screaming. The logical part of your brain has been taken offline. That is a normal, brilliant, biological survival response. But you and I are going to bring it back online, together.
We are going to do one, simple, physical thing. This is not a bulls*hit mindfulness exercise. This is a direct, manual override for your nervous system.
Place your hand on your chest.
Can you feel that? The rise and fall. The rhythm. That is the anchor. That is the proof that you are here, in this moment, and you are alive.
Keep your hand there.
Now, we are going to make one choice. The storm is telling you there are a million overwhelming things you have to do. That is a lie. There are only three choices right now, and you only need to pick one.
This is the button you push when you need the paramedics or the police to show up. This is the “bring the fire truck” button.
This is the national, 24/7 lifeline. It is free, it is confidential, and it is staffed by trained counselors who are ready to listen without judgment. This is the “I need a lifeline” button.
Behavioral Health Response (BHR) is our community’s lifeline. They provide free, confidential telephone counseling and can connect you with local resources. This is the “I need a local guide” button.