The Decision Mirror
Not a personality test. Not a framework.
A precise read on the need that's been running your decisions — without you knowing. Five minutes.
A precise diagnostic built around one decision you're currently sitting with. Not a general profile of who you are.
A mirror. It reveals the need that's currently running your decision making.
A question at the end designed to stay with you. Not to be answered — to be sat with.
A reveal. Short, articulate, and specific to you.
Therapy. It will not process your feelings or help you heal. If that's what you're looking for, this isn't it.
A recommendation. It will not tell you what to decide. It will tell you the need that may be keeping you in place.
A personality assessment. Drivers shift depending on the decision. This is a read on the moment, not the person.
Comfort. If the result reads like a compliment, something went wrong.
Two anchor questions. You describe the decision and where you are with it. The diagnostic only works if it's about something real.
12–15 slider statements. They're not obvious. Rate each one honestly — there are no strategically useful answers here.
Enter your email. Your reveal lands in your inbox — a precise read on the need that's been running this.
One friction question at the end. You don't need to answer it. You need to notice how uncomfortable it makes you feel.
What's underneath is specific to the person who took it. Yours will be specific to you.
Most people read their result and feel two things at once — recognition and mild discomfort. Not because it says something harsh. Because it says something accurate.
If you're skeptical that a five minute diagnostic can tell you anything you don't already know — that's worth paying attention to.
You are not afraid of making the wrong decision. You are afraid of making a decision that cannot be undone — and having to live as the person who made it. Certainty is not your goal; it's your protection.
What's running this stall is not caution. It's the quiet certainty that if you wait long enough, the decision will become obvious, or necessary, or someone else's fault. That's not discernment. That's deferral with better branding.
Your freedom driver — the one that knows what it actually wants — has been in the room the whole time. You've been talking over it.
Complete the diagnostic to receive your mirror
Name it. The diagnostic will do the rest.
Take the diagnostic