Tiered Narrative Inquiry.

The Heart of Our Clinical Method.

Why Traditional Interviews Fail.

Every clinician faces a fundamental dilemma: how do you conduct thorough, systematic inquiry without making the person in front of you feel like a lab rat?

The traditional clinical interview is a catastrophic failure on this front. It's a rigid, soul-crushing process of data extraction that sacrifices human connection for the illusion of objectivity.

The "just be empathetic" approach is no better—often a chaotic, aimless conversation that leaves both client and clinician feeling lost.

The Tiered Narrative Inquiry (TNI) is the solution. A neurobiologically-informed navigational system for therapeutic conversation. Both deeply human and rigorously systematic.

The Neurobiology of Good Questions.

The classic clinical interview is a direct trigger for defensive states. The power dynamic, the rapid-fire questions, the expectation of linear coherence—these are neuroceptive cues of danger.

A client who is being "interrogated" is not in a state of social engagement. They are in survival mode. Their prefrontal cortex—responsible for complex narrative and self-reflection—is being taken offline.

You cannot get an accurate story from a brain that is actively preparing to be eaten by a lion.

TNI is designed from the ground up to be a Polyvagal-informed protocol. Accurate information can only be gathered in a state of profound neuroceptive safety.

The Method: Three Stages of Inquiry.

1

The Funnel

The Art of the Witness

Objective

Create profound neuroceptive safety by becoming a near-perfect witness.

The Method

Begin with a "Grand Tour" question—a maximally open-ended prompt:

  • "Tell me the story of you, starting wherever you'd like."
  • "If your life were a book, what would be the title of the current chapter?"

The Stance

Listen with your entire nervous system. Your face, body, and presence must communicate: "All of you is welcome here."

The Rationale

By refusing to guide the initial narrative, you allow the client's Default Mode Network to present its most dominant stories.

2

Critical Incident

The Art of the Detective

Objective

Collaboratively identify key landmarks—the moments that hold the most energy and meaning.

The Method

Listen for moments of high emotional charge, significant life transitions, or confusing interactions:

  • "That story about your first year of college seems to hold a lot of weight. Would it be okay if we just stayed there for a bit?"
  • Become a journalist: "Who was in the room?" "What happened right before that?"

The Rationale

This is the first step of memory reconsolidation. You are bringing a specific, high-charge memory into a temporary, labile (changeable) state.

3

Phenomenological Deep Dive

The Art of the Seismologist

Objective

Guide the client from the "story" of what happened into the raw, physiological felt sense of the experience.

The Method

You are no longer asking what they thought—you are asking what their body knows:

  • "What was the actual, physical feeling of that shame in your body? Was it hot or cold? Sharp or dull?"
  • "What was the texture of the silence in that room?"
  • "Describe the physical impulse in your arms and legs right then."

The Rationale

This builds the client's interoceptive awareness. It ensures the full emotional and somatic components of the memory are active—ready for reconsolidation with new meaning.

Common Questions About TNI.

You don't decide with your thinking brain—you decide with your nervous system. When a memory makes them lean forward, or their breathing shifts—that's your cue to zoom in. When Tier 3 becomes too intense, zoom back out to give their system a break.

That IS the data. Their answer means: 'It is not safe for me to be in my body right now.' This is a brilliant dorsal vagal survival strategy. Respect it. Back off immediately, validate the adaptation, and return to safer territory.

TNI integrates and evolves those approaches. The difference is our relentless focus on underlying neurobiology—using specific tiered sequences designed to work with known mechanisms of safety, memory, and self-narrative.

Key
Concepts.

Click any term to expand its definition. These are the technical words explained in plain English.

A Conversation Can Be a Revolution.

The Tiered Narrative Inquiry is more than a method; it is a philosophy.

It is a commitment to the belief that every human being has a story that makes perfect sense, and that the right kind of conversation can be the key to unlocking it.

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