At the Center for Neurological Intelligence®, individuals, couples, and leaders are supported in understanding what is happening within them so they can live, love, and lead with greater clarity, connection, and choice.
Many people who find their way here are thoughtful, capable, and motivated. From the outside, life may appear successful or functional. Yet internally, something feels unsettled-emotional loops repeat, stress feels constant, relationships feel strained, or a quiet sense of disconnection persists.
Using the framework of Neurological Intelligence®, this work helps make sense of how the nervous system formed meaning through lived experience-and how those patterns continue to shape thoughts, emotions, behaviors, and relationships today.
Most of us were never taught how our nervous system works.
But no one taught us how early experiences shape emotional meaning, relational patterns, or our sense of self. No one explained why we react the way we do, why certain situations feel overwhelming, or why familiar conflicts repeat even when we "know better."
Neurological Intelligence® offers a grounded, compassionate approach to understanding your inner world-without labels, urgency, or pressure to become someone else.
As awareness grows, the nervous system begins to soften. Old protective strategies no longer need to run automatically. With practice, new responses become available-responses rooted in presence rather than reactivity.
This work is for people from many walks of life who are seeking greater clarity, stability, and connection.
Individuals often seek this work when they are navigating stress, anxiety, life transitions, relationship challenges, or unresolved emotional patterns. Some feel overwhelmed or emotionally reactive. Others feel shut down, disconnected, or stuck in internal conflict.
Many are highly functional on the outside while quietly struggling within.
This work supports individuals who want to understand their nervous system, reduce internal tension, and develop healthier relationships with themselves and others.
Men, in particular, often find this work helpful when they want to move beyond internal protection patterns and connect in more authentic, grounded, and emotionally present ways-without sacrificing strength or integrity.
Couples often arrive feeling caught in repeating cycles of conflict, misunderstanding, or emotional distance. Conversations escalate quickly or go nowhere. Trust and safety feel fragile. Both partners may care deeply, yet feel unsure how to stop hurting one another.
Rather than focusing on who is right or wrong, this work helps couples understand what is happening within each nervous system during moments of stress. When this becomes visible, blame softens, defensiveness decreases, and curiosity returns.
Couples learn how to communicate with respect, understand individual and shared needs, and rebuild safety in ways that strengthen both the relationship and the individuals within it.
Many leaders carry significant responsibility and invisible pressure. Decision-making never truly turns off. The nervous system remains engaged long after the workday ends.
This work supports executives and leaders who want to manage pressure more effectively, lead with clarity, and show up at home as partners or parents-not just as the boss.
Leadership here is not treated as a performance skill, but as an internal state shaped by the nervous system. When that system is supported, leadership becomes more sustainable, grounded, and fulfilling. You do not need to fit a category to belong here. If something inside you is seeking understanding, you are welcome.
My role is not to tell you who to be. It is to help you see what is already happening within you-with clarity, compassion, and practical guidance.
This work blends neuroscience, mindful awareness, and lived experience. Sessions are collaborative and paced with care, respecting the intelligence of your nervous system.
Change does not happen through willpower alone. It happens when awareness becomes embodied.
At the Center for Neurological Intelligence®, the focus goes beyond traditional coaching by helping clients understand the neurological patterns shaping their inner and outer lives.
Founded by author and Neurological Life Coach Glenn S. Cohen, this approach integrates neuroscience, emotional awareness, and lived experience to support meaningful and lasting change.
Through individual sessions, couples work, leadership support, workshops, and the Neurological Intelligence® book series, people are guided in recognizing patterns that once served a purpose but may now limit growth or create unnecessary suffering.
This is not about erasing the past. It is about understanding it-so it no longer runs the present.
Neurological Intelligence® is the ability to understand how your nervous system forms meaning and how that meaning shapes perception, emotion, behavior, and relationships-moment by moment.
Our nervous systems are shaped through experience. Over time, emotional learning becomes belief. Belief becomes protection. Protection becomes pattern. When these patterns remain unconscious, they tend to repeat. When they become visible, choice returns.
Neurological Intelligence® does not teach control. It teaches cooperation with your inner system. Through awareness, patterns can soften, integrate, and transform in ways that support greater clarity, balance, and freedom.
At its heart is a simple truth:
I did not set out to create a methodology. I set out to understand myself.
Like many people, my early life shaped emotional and relational patterns long before I had language for them. I searched for answers through psychology, spirituality, leadership training, and personal growth. Each offered insight, but none fully explained how the nervous system stores meaning-or how early experiences quietly shape our lives.
Over time, Neurological Intelligence® emerged not as a theory, but as a map.
My work is shaped by both professional training and lived experience. I meet people with respect, humility, and care. I also hold people accountable and gently challenge the stories that keep them from living fully.
When the inner world becomes visible, the outer world becomes changeable. If you are here, you are not broken. Something within you is asking to be heard.
Personal guidance to support emotional clarity, healing, and growth.
A safe, supportive space to understand relationship patterns and rebuild connection.
Teachings and reflections to explore at your own pace.
Grounded guidance for those leading others while carrying significant responsibility.
For the last 23 years, Mount Pleasant’s annual ArtFest has created a gathering place where residents can connect, explore diverse art forms and support local talent. And this year promises the same experience.ArtFest will take place from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m on March 21 at Mount Pleasant Towne Centre, 1218 Belk Drive.The free community celebration invites families, art lovers and curious visitors to spend the afternoon immersed in inspiration and imagination.Throughout the day, attendees can enjoy live performances by ...
For the last 23 years, Mount Pleasant’s annual ArtFest has created a gathering place where residents can connect, explore diverse art forms and support local talent. And this year promises the same experience.
ArtFest will take place from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m on March 21 at Mount Pleasant Towne Centre, 1218 Belk Drive.
The free community celebration invites families, art lovers and curious visitors to spend the afternoon immersed in inspiration and imagination.
Throughout the day, attendees can enjoy live performances by area music and dance groups. Visitors can also wander the Art Walk lined with regional artists and makers of photography, jewelry, woodwork, candles, macrame and more. During the Plein Air Paint Out, artists will paint in various places throughout the venue to be judged and awarded during the event closing.
“Art in all its forms has the ability to transform and enlighten both the creator and the viewer,” said Nicole Harvey, community affairs chief with the Mount Pleasant Recreation Department. “We hope that festival participants will leave inspired to pursue their own possibly neglected creative sparks."
ArtFest will also feature a variety of interactive kids' activities. Young artists can try pedal-powered spin art with Good Clean Fun, have their faces painted and enjoy balloon creations and fairy hair styling.
Sweetgrass basket weaving demonstrations and additional craft stations will offer hands-on opportunities to learn about local traditions and artistic techniques. And come hungry, because vendors will be serving up goodies like gyros, chicken sandwiches, Italian ice and Bundt cakes.
“Events like ArtFest help strengthen community pride, encourage cultural appreciation and contribute to the local economy,” said Kathi Herrmann, Towne Centre's marketing director.
“For the local artists specifically, ArtFest provides a valuable platform to showcase their work, connect with new audiences and build relationships within the creative community,” she said.
MOUNT PLEASANT — An apartment complex off Ben Sawyer Boulevard must still pay a mother and daughter $1 million for black mold exposure that left them seriously ill, a court has ruled.The S.C. Court of Appeals on March 4 rejected a Mount Pleasant apartment complex’s appeal of a 2022 jury verdict that found it negligent in its response to Karolina and Krista Richardson’s complaints about black mold in their apartment.The mother and daughter lived at the Oyster Park Apartments at 1421 Shucker Circle complex for a...
MOUNT PLEASANT — An apartment complex off Ben Sawyer Boulevard must still pay a mother and daughter $1 million for black mold exposure that left them seriously ill, a court has ruled.
The S.C. Court of Appeals on March 4 rejected a Mount Pleasant apartment complex’s appeal of a 2022 jury verdict that found it negligent in its response to Karolina and Krista Richardson’s complaints about black mold in their apartment.
The mother and daughter lived at the Oyster Park Apartments at 1421 Shucker Circle complex for about four months in 2017 soon after it opened to tenants. At issue was how long it took for management to respond to their complaints about the presence of mold and how long they knew about it, according to court records.
The two began reporting the symptoms and the presence of black mold in late May 2017 after they were moved to a new unit due to flooding. It wasn’t until they made several requests for mold testing for a month did management hire a lab on July 10, 2017.
The results confirmed what the mother and daughter already knew because of their history of asthma and other conditions that made them sensitive to mold exposure.
The family was moved to another unit. Their health problems related to mold exposure persisted until they left the complex in September 2017. According to the lawsuit, both contracted toxic mold disease as a result of their four months at Oyster Park.
Ninth Circuit Court Judge Jennifer McCoy presided over the 2022 trial. The apartment’s attorneys argued on appeal the judge erred in not providing a directed verdict. They also argued McCoy should not have found them in violation of evidence disclosure rules after notebooks were released on the eve of the trial. McCoy ordered the apartment complex pay the Richardson’s legal fees as a result, according to court records.
An attorney for Oyster Park did not immediately return a request for comment. The appeals court noted that the complex did eventually remediate the mold.
During litigation, Clay McCullough, who represented the Richardson’s, presented several other complaints from residents at Oyster Park that had also struggled with mold and water infiltration in the newly opened complex.
“Our overwhelming hope is that the apartment will pay out what is owed so the Richardson’s can get on with their lives,” McCullough said.
CHARLESTON COUNTY, S.C. (WCSC) — A convicted sex offender’s probation has now been partially revoked after Charleston County deputies say he failed to report multiple internet and social media accounts.Travis Reed Gaye, 27, is facing charges associated with failing to register.A judge has ordered Gaye to spend 180 days behind bars for his probation violations. Court records indicate he will then have his probation reinstated and wear an electronic monitoring device.The Sex Offender Registry Unit completed an ...
CHARLESTON COUNTY, S.C. (WCSC) — A convicted sex offender’s probation has now been partially revoked after Charleston County deputies say he failed to report multiple internet and social media accounts.
Travis Reed Gaye, 27, is facing charges associated with failing to register.
A judge has ordered Gaye to spend 180 days behind bars for his probation violations. Court records indicate he will then have his probation reinstated and wear an electronic monitoring device.
The Sex Offender Registry Unit completed an audit of Gaye and discovered three internet or social media accounts he had not previously disclosed, sheriff’s spokesperson Lexi Douglas said.
In November, Gaye pleaded down to six counts of third-degree sexual exploitation of a minor and was subsequently required to register as a convicted sex offender. Court documents state that, in 2023, Gaye had video of an infant being forced to commit sex acts.
At the hearing, Gaye was sentenced to five years of sex offender probation, placed on the sex offender registry and told he would serve 10 years in prison if he violated probation. Gaye registered nine days later and acknowledged in his contract that he must provide internet accounts and internet identifiers.
Live 5 Investigates first followed accusations of Gaye violating probation and the registry on Feb. 23, where he stood before a judge following an arrest by South Carolina’s Department of Probation, Parole and Pardon Services.
Gaye was arrested for two violations of his parole: allegedly possessing sexually explicit materials and possessing alcohol, both of which were violations of his parole.
An order of continuance was filed, which stated that the court received an email from the General Counsel at the Department of Probation, Pardon and Parole Services four days later.
At the hearing, Judge David Graham said he would have a decision by the end of the week, but that decision was not made by the time he was rearrested.
It went on to state, “the Department’s recommendation had changed from what had been presented at the hearing.” Originally, the state recommended GPS tracking, increased levels of supervision, and continued counseling, but did not recommend more time behind bars.
Gaye’s attorney, Charlie Condon, objected to the email and any consideration of the email without a hearing, records state. The matter of Gaye’s probation violation was continued to the next available court term.
Gaye currently lives in Mount Pleasant and his proximity to nearby parks and recreational facilities has raised concerns with neighbors. He is legally allowed to live within 1,000 feet of these locations because of loopholes in South Carolina law.
PRIOR COVERAGE: SC child sex offender arrested on probation violations, released same day
He remains booked at the Al Cannon Detention Center.
You do not need to know exactly what you are looking for. Only a willingness to explore.
If something here resonates, I invite you to reach out. We will begin with a simple, complimentary conversation-an opportunity for you to ask questions, sense alignment, and decide whether this feels like the right support for you.