The Clarity Assessment

Why Clarity Feels Difficult to Access (and Where to Start)

Many high-functioning women assume they have a clarity problem.

They find themselves second-guessing decisions, overthinking simple choices, feeling pulled in multiple directions, or struggling to know what is true beneath competing pressures and expectations.

Often, they are not lacking clarity. They are navigating competing signals.

Imagine you are trying to make a decision.

Part of you feels responsible.
Part of you feels afraid.
Part of you is considering what others expect.
Part of you wants certainty before moving forward.

The question is no longer, "What should I do?" The question becomes, "Which signal am I listening to?"

The Clarity Assessment is a free reflection tool designed to help you identify where clarity is flowing naturally and where the signal becomes harder to recognize.

This is not a personality test, diagnosis, or measure of worth. There are no right or wrong scores. The goal is simply to help you become aware where you tend to get stuck so the next step becomes visible.

Inside the Assessment

This assessment explores some of the most common places friction occurs.

You will gain insight into where you struggle to notice important signals, return to what matters after stress or overwhelm, or distinguish what is true from fear, urgency, pressure, or expectation.

The assessment uses Awareness, Reconnection, and Discernment to help you identify where friction is occurring.

Does Any of This Sound Familiar?

  • You know what everyone else wants, but struggle to know what you want.

  • You revisit the same decision repeatedly.

  • You feel pulled in multiple directions.

  • You mistake urgency for clarity.

  • You know something feels off but can't quite put words to it.

  • You are exhausted from trying to force an answer.

Dana is an Integrative Health Practitioner and retired Registered Nurse who works with high-functioning women who have learned to operate brilliantly—while quietly abandoning themselves. She helps them reconnect with what is true and respond with agency so they can stabilize through seasons of transition. From there, they begin authoring their lives from a place of integration.