Worth a conversation with your doctor.
These are not personality tests, and they don't pretend to be. They're validated screening instruments — the same ones clinicians hand across the desk — with one job: telling you whether something is worth raising with your family doctor, and giving you a one-pager to bring when you do.
How this is different from the rest of Wrenlight
Everything else here is self-discovery — archetypes, portraits, patterns. This section deliberately drops all of that. No archetype names, no pastel scores, no "The Scattered Mind." A screener is a structured set of questions with published thresholds, and what it produces isn't an identity — it's a signal strength.
Each screener is a published, validated scale used in actual clinical practice — named, cited, and unmodified. Your doctor will recognize it on sight.
A positive screen means "this pattern is strong enough to be worth a professional's time." A negative screen is not an all-clear. Only a clinician who knows your history can do the rest.
Screener results never enter your Portrait, never touch your account, and are never used in any cross-test reading. They live in your browser, on this device, and nowhere else.
Available now
Adult ADHD — ASRS v1.1
AvailableThe Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale, developed with the WHO. Part A is the six-question screener with a published threshold; Part B adds twelve items of context your clinician can read alongside it.
Take the screener →Anxiety — GAD-7
PlannedThe seven-item Generalized Anxiety Disorder scale — the most widely used anxiety screen in primary care.
Wellbeing — WHO-5
PlannedFive questions about the past two weeks. Low scores are a common, doctor-recognized prompt for a closer look at mood and energy.
What you walk away with
The point of a screener isn't the number — it's the conversation it starts. So every screener here ends with a printable one-pager designed to be handed to a physician:
The doctor one-pager
- The instrument, named and cited — so your doctor knows exactly what was administered and can trust the format.
- Every question with your exact response — not a summary, the actual item-level answers clinicians want to see.
- The published scoring, applied transparently — which responses crossed threshold and what the screening result was.
- An honest provenance note — completed unsupervised, online, self-reported; screening only, not a diagnostic interview.
Honest limits
Screeners trade depth for reach. They can't see your sleep, your stress, your thyroid, your life circumstances — all of which can produce the same patterns these questions ask about. That's precisely why the output is a conversation with someone who can.
A screen can also miss. If something is genuinely affecting your work, your relationships, or your peace — raise it with your doctor regardless of what any questionnaire says, this one included.
If you're in distress right now, a screening questionnaire is not the tool — please contact your doctor, local emergency services, or a crisis line in your area.