Evans Intake | Emma

In the intake process, Emma balanced a clinician’s rigor with a storyteller’s sensitivity. She knew which words could open doors and which questions would slam them shut. She calibrated her language to meet people where they were — sometimes clinical and direct, sometimes gentle and deceptively simple. She believed that an intake was a pact: the client offered truth in whatever form they had it, and she offered a scaffold to hold it.

Her colleagues joked that Emma had an invisible compass for risk and resilience. She could point out strengths that others missed: the way someone kept appointments despite chaos, a single supportive friend, a hobby salvaged from earlier life. Those small beacons reshaped the intake from a list of problems into a ledger of possibilities. emma evans intake

Outside the clinic, Emma carried intake into the world. She noticed missing titles in strangers’ lives and offered them back their names. At a coffee shop she’d ask the barista about their favorite drink and remember it weeks later; in meetings she’d surface the unsaid tension and rephrase it into a usable question. Intake, for her, was a practice — a way of paying attention that folded into daily life. In the intake process, Emma balanced a clinician’s