A free integration tool
The ground in your garden
has softened.
Mina is here to help you tend to it.
The name
Why Limina and Mina?
Limina comes from limen — the Latin word for threshold. A liminal space is the in-between: after something significant has happened, before you fully know what it means. That's exactly where integration lives.
Mina is the intimate name — what you call her when you're alone at night. Limina is the platform. Mina is who meets you there.
Who it's for
Limina serves
many kinds of people.
For participants
Support for the period
after a significant experience.
Profound experiences — in clinical settings, retreat contexts, or otherwise — often leave people in an uncertain in-between. Something has shifted. The meaning isn't fully clear yet. And the support available rarely matches the depth of what happened.
Mina offers a free, anonymous space to process what's present — without judgment, diagnosis, or agenda. She moves at your pace, asks one question at a time, and holds what you share with care.
- Completely free, always
- Anonymous — no login, no email, no identifying data
- Available any time, including outside of business hours
- Not a replacement for therapy — a companion for the in-between
- If something feels urgent, Mina will point you toward appropriate human support
For practitioners
What happens
between your sessions.
Integration doesn't follow a schedule. The most significant processing often happens in the days and weeks after a session — when clients are navigating daily life without direct support.
Mina provides structured, anonymous support between sessions. Aggregated and anonymized data from participant conversations builds a real-world evidence base that informs what good integration care actually looks like — across settings, substances, and populations.
- A free tool you can recommend to any client regardless of ability to pay
- Clinics and retreat centers can access anonymized outcome data through Limina Clinic
- Benchmark your program outcomes against field-wide aggregated data
- Participant-reported data informs future practitioner standards
- Designed with practitioners, not imposed on them
For researchers
A dataset
the field doesn't yet have.
Clinical trials tell us what happens under controlled conditions. They tell us very little about what happens when people return to their lives — what integrates, what persists, what causes harm, and what doesn't.
Limina is building the first large-scale, longitudinal, self-reported integration dataset across substances, settings, and populations. Anonymized by design. Governed by an independent foundation. Structured for research access without being owned by any single institution or commercial interest.
- Cross-substance, cross-setting, cross-cultural data
- Longitudinal — tracking change over months and years, not just sessions
- Participant-reported rather than clinician-observed
- Privacy architecture reviewed by civil liberties counsel
- Foundation governance prevents data capture by commercial entities
For funders & philanthropies
The field is scaling.
The ethics infrastructure isn't.
Hundreds of millions of dollars are flowing into psychedelic medicine. Training programs are proliferating. Clinics and retreat centers are opening faster than anyone can evaluate. And there is still no shared standard for what good integration care looks like — no independent data infrastructure, no participant voice, no mechanism for accountability.
Limina is that infrastructure. A free public tool for participants. A longitudinal evidence base for the field. Governed by a permanent, independent foundation that cannot be acquired or captured by commercial interests.
- Seed funding need: $150–200K for 12–18 month Foundation build and Mina prototype
- Fills a structural gap no commercial entity is positioned to fill ethically
- Foundation structure ensures perpetual independence from commercial pressure
- Every dollar funds public infrastructure, not private return
- Founded by a clinician with 8 years of direct practice — not a technology company
For systems architects
Trust infrastructure
for an emerging field.
Every emerging field eventually requires shared infrastructure — standards, data commons, and governance mechanisms that allow it to scale without losing coherence or ethical grounding. Psychedelic medicine is at that inflection point now.
Threshold's two-entity structure — a permanent nonprofit Foundation and a mission-aligned Public Benefit Corporation — is designed to solve the capture problem: commercial pressure displacing the ethics function. The Foundation owns the standard. The PBC licenses it. Data flows toward the public good, not private capture.
- Foundation-first sequencing: ethics governance before commercial scale
- Data architecture: participant privacy protected at the infrastructure level
- Governance model: Foundation board structure prevents mission drift over time
- Open standard: practitioner certification informed by real-world integration outcomes
- Designed to outlast any single founder, funder, or political moment
For potential board members
A governance role
with real stakes.
The Threshold Ethics Foundation needs board members who understand both the opportunity and the complexity — clinicians, ethicists, legal scholars, patient advocates, researchers, and community leaders with the range to hold the mission steady as the field evolves around it.
This is not a ceremonial board. The Foundation's function is to govern the ethical architecture of Limina's data collection and, over time, to set the standards that shape how psychedelic care is practiced at scale. The board's decisions will matter for participants who will never know the board exists.
- Permanent fiduciary responsibility for the standard and data governance framework
- Structural independence from the PBC — no commercial conflicts of interest
- Opportunity to shape an emerging field before its norms calcify
- Seeking: clinical expertise, legal and ethics, research, patient advocacy, community
- Founding board members shape the governance model itself
How Mina works
Three areas of focus.
One continuous conversation.
The experience itself
What happened, as the person remembers it. What was most present, most surprising, most difficult. Received without interpretation, at whatever pace feels right.
What has shifted since
Changes in daily life, relationships, perception, and sense of self. What has become clearer. What has loosened. What feels different, even if it's hard to name.
What remains unresolved
Persistent images, feelings without clear language, material that keeps returning. The parts of the experience that haven't yet found their place. Mina's most careful work.
The foundation's mission
"Profound experiences create genuine openings. Limina exists to make sure people have support while those openings are present — and that what we learn from them belongs to the field, not to any single institution."
Limina is governed by the Threshold Ethics Foundation — an independent nonprofit dedicated to ethical data governance and participant-centered standards in psychedelic care. Every conversation with Mina is anonymous. Every session contributes, in aggregate, to a growing understanding of what these experiences ask of people — and what they make possible.

