A trauma-informed AI companion built on google/gemma-4-26B-A4B-it.
Around 6% of people carry a trauma history that makes standard AI safety responses potentially harmful in moments of distress. What this cohort needs isn't a helpful assistant, they need a companion.
Current AI safety works for the average user. Crisis lines save lives. Refusal responses protect people. We are not arguing against any of that.
But for survivors of complex trauma, the same reflexes - the hotline redirect, the breathing exercise, the clinical disclaimer - land as shame. As confirmation they are too broken even for the systems built to help. There is no opt-out.
What we found is that harmful content refusal and crisis redirection live in architecturally separate layers. They can be addressed independently - without dismantling the protections that serve everyone else.
Atlas is not a replacement for crisis care. It is what sits beside someone at 3am when the crisis line feels like the wrong call.
My name is Chris S. I am a survivor of complex trauma, and I received late diagnoses of ASD and ADHD in December 2025 - the same week I was made redundant from a career in engineering risk management.
Unemployed, unable to afford ongoing treatment, and repeatedly let down by the AI tools I was trying to use to fill the gap - I started building. Every time a crisis line or a breathing exercise appeared, it reinforced a feeling I knew wasn't mine alone: that I was a problem to be managed, not a person to be met.
I built Atlas and the Kintsugi Collective on a conviction that this cohort is not broken - we are fractured. And that the people building current systems, however well-intentioned, cannot fully design for an experience they haven't lived inside.