We bring NEI into a wider field — and help that field come together
At the same time, NEI is not alone.
Across disciplines — from somatic work to trauma research, from coaching to therapeutic practice — different methods are working with what we refer to as imprints: unresolved emotional patterns and internal load that shape perception, behavior, and well-being below conscious awareness.
These approaches often develop in parallel, using different languages, frameworks, and entry points — while pointing to a shared underlying reality.
The NEI Institute was established to address both sides of this: to bring NEI into broader awareness, and to contribute to a more connected, less fragmented field around imprints.
Our mission is to become a meaningful European reference point for Neuro-Emotional Integration within this wider landscape: an open, independent, and accessible platform for anyone seeking to understand this work — whether they are professionally trained, academically curious, or simply looking for something that works when other approaches have reached their limit.
We see NEI not as a fixed method, but as a powerful and evolving framework within a broader movement — one that sits at the intersection of neuroscience, somatic practice, trauma research, and systemic thinking. Our role is to support both its visibility and its integration into a larger, more coherent field through awareness, connection, and honest exchange.
The Institute therefore functions not only as a source of information, but as a meeting point — a place where knowledge, practice, and emerging research can come into dialogue as the field continues to develop.
A shared foundation from which Neuro-Emotional Integration — and the broader field around imprints — can evolve responsibly and openly.
Where We Are Going
A Europe where Neuro-Emotional Integration is part of the conversation about human wellbeing — and where the broader understanding of imprints becomes more visible, accessible, and grounded across disciplines.
Where NEI is recognized as a powerful and evolving approach within a wider field of methods that address imprints — contributing clarity, depth, and practical application to a space that has long been fragmented.
Where a person carrying years of unresolved emotional load can find their way to this kind of work — including NEI — without having to rely on coincidence, because the landscape is visible, connected, and easier to navigate.
Where practitioners are well-trained, well-connected, and working within a field that is becoming more coherent — and where emerging research into the nervous system, emotional memory, and human behavior increasingly reflects and informs this work.
This will take time. We are not in a hurry. But we are building — deliberately, carefully, and with the conviction that what NEI makes possible, and what becomes possible when imprints are addressed more broadly, should no longer remain fragmented or hidden at the margins.