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LLM-generated — the underlying wiki articles are AI-generated, and notebooks below are clinician-curated. Verify against primary sources before any clinical use.
Therapy Aligned™ Clinical Wiki

Public Library

Clinician-curated notebooks of therapy theories, modalities & frameworks

A growing shelf of reading lists that clinicians have assembled from the Clinical Wiki — themed collections built around a population, a problem, a modality, or a question worth studying. Browse what others have curated, or publish your own.

The Therapy Aligned™ Clinical Wiki maps hundreds of therapeutic theories, modalities, and cross-disciplinary frameworks. The Public Library is where that map gets organized by people who use it. Instead of one canonical index, the Library collects many curated notebooks — each a clinician's own short reading list, pulled together for a real clinical purpose.

Browse curated notebooks

Search to pull matching notebooks into the window below, or browse the whole collection on The Bookshelf.

The Bookshelf

Loading curated notebooks…

What is a curated clinical notebook?

A notebook is a named collection of wiki articles, grouped around a theme its author cared about: approaches for grieving adolescents, third-wave behavioral therapies, frameworks that speak to moral injury, a single theorist's lineage. Where the Vault shows everything at once, a notebook is a deliberate path through it — a few well-chosen entries instead of the whole atlas. Notebooks don't add new clinical claims; they curate and sequence what's already in the wiki.

How clinicians use the Library

Curated reading lists do quiet, practical work in everyday clinical life:

Save any notebook to your own Library to read later, or export it to Markdown for NotebookLM or your notes app — the same saving and export tools you already use on individual articles.

Publish your own notebook

Anyone can contribute. Open your Library from the bookmark button on any wiki page, organize a few articles into a notebook, and choose Publish. You sign in with Google so each published notebook is tied to a verified account — that's the only thing sign-in is used for. You decide whether to share anonymously or with credit (your name and credentials, and an optional contact). Publishing is immediate, and you can unpublish your own notebook at any time. Credentials shown on a listing are self-reported, and listings are not reviewed or endorsed by Therapy Aligned.

Open the Vault to start a notebook →

Frequently asked questions

How do I save a notebook to my own Library?

Open a notebook and tap “Save to my Library.” It copies that notebook and its articles into your personal Library, where you can read, export, or reorganize it. If you're signed in, your saved notebooks sync across your devices.

Can I publish a notebook anonymously, or with credit?

Either. When you publish, you choose to share anonymously or with credit — your name, credentials, and an optional contact. You sign in with Google so the notebook is tied to a verified account, but you decide what's shown publicly.

Are curators and their credentials verified?

No. Sign-in confirms a Google account, but the names and credentials on a listing are self-reported and are not verified or endorsed by Therapy Aligned. Treat every notebook as a community contribution.

How are notebooks ordered?

By what clinicians find most useful — most-upvoted first, with how many times a notebook has been saved breaking ties, and more recent notebooks surfacing when those are equal.

Who can see the notebooks I save?

Only you. Saved notebooks live in your private Library — on your device, and synced to your account if you sign in. A notebook becomes public only when you explicitly choose Publish.

How do I report a notebook, or remove one I published?

Every notebook has a Report link that emails the Therapy Aligned team. If you published a notebook, you can unpublish it anytime from your Library, and it's removed from the Public Library immediately.

Is anything here clinical advice?

No. The underlying wiki articles are generated by large language models for clinician education and exploration, and the notebooks are user-curated. Nothing here is clinical advice or a substitute for training, supervision, or primary literature.