From your first question to a living map of your mind. Here's how the pieces fit together.
Soc builds a document about you over time. It tracks your patterns, names your blind spots, and maps your growth across philosophical traditions. Share it with your therapist or keep it for yourself. Either way, you walk into every session with a clear place to start.
Each dot represents a philosophical frame. The more frames you explore a pattern through, the richer the picture becomes.
A belief that competence must be performed at all times, rooted in early family expectations where love felt conditional on visible achievement. The Stoic lens revealed a confusion between what is "up to you" and what others need to witness. The Jungian lens named the Persona: a polished exterior built to manage others' perceptions, at the cost of connection to the inner self.
Buddhism introduced the suffering that comes from clinging to an identity that was never yours to maintain. Taoism deepened this through wu wei: the paradox that true competence often looks like letting go.
What began as "I have trouble being vulnerable in relationships" has been revealed, across ten philosophical frames, as a deep belief that being fully known will lead to abandonment. Jungian work named the Shadow: parts of the self kept hidden because showing them felt too dangerous as a child.
The Islamic lens on tawakkul reframed vulnerability as an act of faith. Hinduism's lila offered the possibility that relationships are experiences to inhabit, not tests to pass. The complete picture reveals that the fear of being known is a fear of being loved for what you are rather than what you perform.
Each pattern Soc identifies becomes a living document. It starts small, a single observation, then grows richer each time you explore it through a new philosophical frame. By the time a document reaches Diamond tier, it contains the full shape of a pattern as seen through ten different lenses.
This is what you share with your therapist. Not a summary of symptoms, but a map of how you think.
Between sessions, the Journal is where you notice. A moment with a coworker. A conversation with your parent that left a residue. The feeling you had walking home. Each entry can be tagged with the Roots and Echoes Soc has identified, turning scattered observations into connected evidence.
When you sit down with Soc next, these entries are already in context. No catching up required.
The Timeline weaves your journal entries, session records, pattern discoveries, and question shifts into a single chronological view. It's where you see the arc. Not just what happened, but how your understanding of it evolved.
Shifts, the moments when your fundamental question changes, are marked explicitly. These are the turning points your therapist needs to see.
Your first session with Soc takes five minutes. Your therapist will notice the difference.
Launch the AppInvite-only early access.