NeuroAmigo · the lab

How the lab works

NeuroAmigo runs as a visible validation lab: a handful of real people, one real event each, and a presence built entirely from their own words. Everything below is the whole method — there is no hidden machinery.

The method

You bring one upcoming event and spend about fifteen minutes telling us what your calm self already knows about it — your limits, your exit plan, what "good enough" means, and what support should never sound like for you. Around the event you receive one to four short WhatsApp messages, written from your words only, in the presence style you chose. A real person drafts every message, checks it against your limits, and presses send by hand. A few days after the event, one quiet close arrives at your usual clear moment — the same message whether the event went well or badly; you can opt out. Within two days of the event we ask you one question: did it help? Your answer — including "no" — is the product of this lab.

What counts as "one real event"

The lab studies one kind of moment: a near-term social or work moment where you might mask, over-explain, freeze, avoid, or ruminate afterward. That includes a work meeting, a difficult conversation, a date, a family call, a class or language lesson, a networking or group event, or an appointment. If your event sits outside that frame, we'll say so kindly and keep your note for a later round — the narrowness is deliberate, because studying one moment well beats studying every moment badly.

Privacy

What you share — your event, your words, your WhatsApp number — lives in hand-managed private files on the founder's machine, and nowhere else. Nothing about you appears in any public place; when the lab writes about what it learned, people appear as initials and role-words at most, never as names, numbers, or employers. This site has no analytics, no cookies, no trackers, and no accounts. Ask for your data to be deleted and it is deleted, no questions.

Safety

This is not therapy, diagnosis, crisis support, or medical advice, and the founder is not a clinician. The lab screens out anyone primarily seeking therapy or in active crisis — not because those needs don't matter, but because this experiment is the wrong tool for them. If distress shows up mid-arc, messages pause; say "stop" in any words and they stop immediately, no questions asked. If anything crisis-shaped appears, the lab stops being a product: you'll get a human reply and real resources — in the US, call or text 988; in Colombia, Línea 106 (or 123 in an emergency); elsewhere, findahelpline.com.

The ask

One real event, about fifteen honest minutes of intake, one to four messages, and a ten-minute debrief afterward. In return you get a small, careful presence built from your own clear-state words — and a say in whether this should exist at all.

Intake opens soon.