Back
Scan complete

wanderandrisewellness.com

1 page · 2.2s · Scanned just now

0/ 100
AI automation score

Mostly human-written

76% confidence

How to read this score
0–35 · Mostly human35–65 · Mixed signals65–100 · Mostly AI

The score is a fingerprint of automation, not a quality judgment. A high score means the page reads as machine-generated. It doesn't mean the page is bad.

What we scanned
Page title
Childhood Trauma | St. Louis Trauma Therapist | Wander & Rise
Meta description
Support for adults healing childhood trauma, emotional neglect, and relationships with a St. Louis trauma therapist. In person and online throughout MO and ID.
Final URL
https://www.wanderandrisewellness.com/st-louis-trauma-therapist(after redirect from https://wanderandrisewellness.com/st-louis-trauma-therapist)
Language
en
Built with
Wix
Social preview
What we saw

This page reads as hand-written clinical content by a practicing trauma therapist. The voice is distinct and informed by real therapeutic experience: phrases like "the kids who had to grow up too fast" and specific pattern names ("The Imposter Baseline," "The Chameleon") are too idiosyncratic and emotionally calibrated for an LLM. The structure is irregular and non-templated; H3 subheadings sit within H2 sections asymmetrically. All images carry alt text, and there are no hallmarks of stock-photo uniformity or AI image generation. The tone varies contextually (empathetic framing, then diagnostic detail) in a way that reflects a therapist's voice, not a marketing prompt.

Top findings
  • Worth notingContent

    Compassionate, clinically-grounded voice—patterns named with specificity that reflects real therapeutic practice.

    Evidence
    • You might not describe your childhood as traumatic. There was no single dramatic event.body
    • The Parentified Child: Taking on the weight of a parent's mental health or substance use before you were old enough to carry it.body
    • The Chameleon: Shrinking your own needs to ensure everyone else stays comfortable.body
    Try this

    This is a strength—maintain the clinical authenticity and avoid adding marketing jargon like 'leverage' or 'unlock.'

What's working

Signals of human authorship the page is doing well.

  • Tone

    Empathetic, second-person voice with poetic specificity that only a practicing clinician would write—avoids generic marketing register.

  • Content

    Pattern labels ('The Imposter Baseline,' 'Decision Paralysis,' 'The Hall Monitor') are clinically informed and emotionally precise rather than templated.

SEO auditFair
71/100
AI breakdown by category
  • Content15

    Distinctive voice with vivid, specific metaphors ("the kids who had to grow up too fast," "The Hall Monitor," "The Chameleon") and intricate personal details reflecting real clinical experience.

  • Structure28

    Non-template layout with asymmetric H3 subheadings and varied section depths; "Quick Exit" link and layered navigation suggest custom build, not AI page builder.

  • Imagery15

    Five images with full alt text present; no stock-photo uniformity or visible AI generation markers detected from provided metadata.

  • Tone12

    Empathetic, second-person clinical voice with poetic metaphors and internal contradictions ("love came with conditions") — consistent with a therapist's authentic professional register.

By the numbers
  • Words669
  • Images5
  • Alt coverage100%
  • Internal links19
  • External links3
  • Schema blocks0
  • HTML size1,838 KB
SEO audit detail
  • Meta tags
    All present
    Why this matters

    Why it matters. Title and description are the two strings Google shows in search results. They decide whether anyone clicks. A canonical tag tells Google which URL is the source of truth when the same content lives at multiple paths.

    Passing looks like. A non-empty title under 60 characters, a meta description under 160, and a self-referencing canonical link.

    Fix. Add the missing tags inside the page head. Treat the title as a headline you'd want to read in a SERP, not a brand slogan.

  • Heading structure
    1 H1, 5 H2
    Why this matters

    Why it matters. Headings are how crawlers and assistive tech understand a page's outline. One H1 names the page. H2s break it into sections. Skipped levels and missing H1s confuse both.

    Passing looks like. Exactly one H1, at least one H2, and no skipped levels (no H1 to H3 jumps).

    Fix. Replace the missing or duplicate H1 with a single, descriptive heading. Promote section titles to H2. Demote sub-points to H3.

  • Mobile readiness
    Responsive
    Why this matters

    Why it matters. Google indexes mobile-first. A page without a responsive viewport renders zoomed-out on phones, fails Core Web Vitals on touch, and loses its mobile ranking.

    Passing looks like. A meta viewport tag with width=device-width and a layout that reflows under 600px.

    Fix. Add a viewport meta tag set to width=device-width and initial-scale=1, then audit your largest blocks at mobile widths.

  • Page speed signals
    2.2s response
    Why this matters

    Why it matters. Page weight and response time directly feed Core Web Vitals. Slow LCP and oversized HTML hurt rankings more than people expect.

    Passing looks like. First-byte under 1.5s, HTML payload under 500 KB, fewer than 30 images on the initial render.

    Fix. Trim render-blocking scripts, defer non-critical CSS, and serve compressed images sized to the viewport. Move heavy components below the fold.

  • Schema markup
    No JSON-LD
    Why this matters

    Why it matters. JSON-LD structured data is how you earn rich results: review stars, FAQ accordions, breadcrumbs, article cards. Skip it and Google has nothing structured to pull from when it builds your SERP card.

    Passing looks like. At least one valid JSON-LD block matching schema.org types relevant to the page (Article, Product, FAQPage, Organization).

    Fix. Add an application/ld+json script block describing the page. Validate with Google's Rich Results Test before deploying.

  • Broken links
    2/5 broken in sample
    Why this matters

    Why it matters. Broken internal links waste crawl budget, degrade UX, and signal to Google that the site isn't well-maintained. They also cap how deep crawlers reach.

    Passing looks like. Every internal link in the sample returns 2xx or 3xx. No dead anchors, no stale paths.

    Fix. Use the link list above to spot the broken paths. Either restore the missing pages or update the links to point at live URLs.

  • Image alt text
    All have alt
    Why this matters

    Why it matters. Alt text is what screen readers read aloud, and what Google reads instead of pixels. Skip it and you lose on both fronts.

    Passing looks like. Every meaningful image has a descriptive alt attribute. Decorative images can use alt="" to be skipped intentionally.

    Fix. Audit images in /assets and CMS uploads. Write alts that describe what's in the image, not what it links to.

Heading outline

Every H1, H2, and H3 we found on the page, in document order.

Show heading outline
  1. H1Find Support with a St. Louis Childhood Trauma Therapist in Missouri & Idaho
  2. H2Counseling in St. Louis for the kids who had to grow up too fast
  3. H2Designing the Silent Survival Strategy
  4. H2Noticeable Patterns of Childhood Stress
  5. H2Breaking the Cycle
  6. H2Reconciling Past & Present
  7. H3The Early Blueprint
  8. H3How It Feels Inside
  9. H3How It Shows Up with Others
Sampled links

We HEAD-check up to five internal links to spot broken paths quickly.

Show sampled links

Was this report useful?

Share this scan

Every CrawlRanker scan gets a public, shareable URL. Send it to a client, post it in a thread, or benchmark a competitor.

Preview scan. SEO checks are live. AI scoring is in beta.