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See what's really driving the moment.

Pick one stressful situation and answer a few short questions. You'll get a clear read on whether it's a body-first alarm, a learned trigger, or a mind-led story, and the kind of help that actually fits. Built on affective neuroscience, with Alissa Lang.

The idea

Stress runs at three levels. Each one needs a different kind of help.

Most advice aims only at the thinking mind. But a lot of stress starts lower down, before any thought. Knowing which level is leading is what tells you what will actually work in the moment.

1

The body

A fast, body-first alarm. Racing heart, tight chest, the urge to fight, flee, or freeze. It fires before you can think, so it settles through the body first, not logic.

2

The trigger

A learned response. A tone, a place, a person, or a time of month gets wired to the alarm and pulls the chain. It settles by updating the old pattern.

3

The story

The mind's meaning. What-ifs, rehearsal, and the story about what it says about you. It settles by working with the thinking, not fighting the feeling.

Choose a check

Which one fits what you're feeling?

Each check takes a specific moment and shows which level is running the show. There is no wrong answer and nothing to diagnose. Start with whichever is closest.

What to expect

Simple, private, and yours to keep.

Two minutes

A handful of questions about one moment. No account, no long form, no waiting.

Private

Your answers stay in your browser. Nothing to submit, and nothing shared unless you choose to reach out.

A next step

You leave with a clear read on the level that's leading, and the kind of help that fits it.

Questions

Good to know

Is this a diagnosis or a test?

No. It's a curiosity tool, not an assessment. It won't label you or score your mental health. It simply reflects back which level seems most active in one situation, so you can meet it with the right kind of help.

Which check should I pick?

Go with the feeling that's loudest right now. If you're anxious, start with Anxiety; if you're angry, start with Anger, and so on. You can take more than one, and it's fine if a moment touches several. The Drive companion is different: use it when motivation feels stuck rather than when you're distressed.

What's the science behind it?

The checks draw on affective neuroscience, particularly Jaak Panksepp's emotional systems, and a three-level model of the stress response: a primary body alarm, a secondary learned trigger, and a tertiary mind-led story. The point is that different levels respond to different tools.

What happens with my answers?

They stay on your device and aren't sent anywhere. The perimenopause check can optionally collect anonymous, aggregate information to improve the work, and that is kept structurally separate from any contact details you might choose to share.

This is regulation work, not therapy or medical care. It does not diagnose, and it does not give medical or hormone advice. For anything clinical, including questions about perimenopause treatment, your GP is the right first call. If you're in crisis, please contact your local emergency services or a crisis line.

Beyond the check

Want to work through your own pattern?

The checks are the simplest place to begin. If you'd like to go further, Emotional Downshift is the full method, worked one to one across all three levels.