“…There is no 'right' way to externalise thoughts: (Jonassen & Cho, 2008), we often need "visual prostheses" to share our mental imagery with each other, inclusive tools to help people capture, and communicate the qualitative dimensions of their experiences, to enable discussion or peer support, or even to facilitate group or team sensemaking. Some approaches use abstracted metaphors of real-world elements, such as the 'navigation charts' (Rygh & Clatworthy, 2019)-supporting cross-disciplinary work in the healthcare sector, making communication otherwise hindered by jargon, more inclusive-or the Mental Landscapes kit (Ricketts & Lockton, 2019) which uses cardboard elements such as mountains, trees, fences, rivers, and more to facilitate the creation of a 'mental landscape' to physicalize career paths and project experiences. Other approaches use more abstract forms, physicalizing digital experiences in participatory design research (Fass, 2016), or Emotional Modelling (Luria et al, 2021), which uses geometric shapes from different materials and colours that can be connected to help participants communicate mental health experiences.…”