HUMAN DEVELOPMENT & RESTORATION

You were made for something.

And something happened.

Noble Ruins is built on a single conviction: that every person carries both inherent dignity and real brokenness — and that neither cancels the other out.

Ancient stone ruins with a large arched doorway, flanked by broken columns and scattered rocks, illuminated by bright sunlight with a fiery red and orange sky in the background.

Noble

Ruins

The Ruins were never the whole story.

WHY RUINS

The most beautiful ruins don't hide their damage. They reveal what was worth building in the first place.

When you stand inside ancient ruins, you see two things simultaneously — the fractures, the collapse, the evidence of time and force. And the craftsmanship. The original intention. The fact that someone built something here worth standing in.

We believe human beings are like that. The brokenness is real. So is the nobility. The work isn't to choose between them — it's to learn to see both, and to move forward from that honest place.

That tension is load-bearing. Remove it and you have either naive optimism or crushing despair. Hold it and you have something worth building a life on.

THE FRAMEWORK

Be Curious. Stay Humble. Love Well.™

THE BCSHLW FRAMEWORK · NOBLE RUINS

At the center of Noble Ruins is a relational formation framework built from years of clinical practice, attachment research, and the conviction that how we relate to one another is one of the most formative things we do.

01

Be Curious

To approach yourself and others with genuine interest rather than judgment. Curiosity creates the conditions for honest conversation — and honest conversation is where change begins.

02

Stay Humble

To hold your perspective loosely enough that another person's reality can actually land. Humility isn't self-diminishment — it's the willingness to be changed by what you encounter.

03

Love Well

The costliest of the three. To move toward another person with intention and care even when it's inconvenient, uncomfortable, or unreturned. This is what the first two postures are building toward.

These aren't sequential steps. They're a posture — a way of orienting toward yourself, your relationships, and the world. The framework is designed to be learned, practiced, and returned to. Not mastered once and left behind.

The same interior wounds show up in the therapist's office and the boardroom — in the marriage that's falling apart and the one that looks fine from the outside.


Noble Ruins

WHO THIS IS FOR

Noble Ruins doesn't sort people into those who are struggling and those who are fine. The work of formation is for anyone willing to do it honestly.

Individuals

Anyone doing the honest work of understanding themselves — their patterns, their defenses, the gap between who they want to be and how they actually show up.

Couples

Partners at any stage — premarital, early marriage, long marriage — who want a shared language for the relational work they're already doing.

Churches & Ministries

Communities that believe formation is central to faith — and want a framework that holds theological conviction and clinical integrity in the same hand.

Clinicians & Practitioners

Therapists, counselors, and coaches looking for a framework grounded in attachment theory and neuroscience that can be applied across clinical and community contexts.

Headshot of the founder Ryan Worley with a beard, wearing a blue button-up shirt, standing against a blurred blue background.
The signature of the founder Ryan Worley

Ryan Worley

Founder · Noble Ruins · Licensed Professional Counselor

Ryan Worley is a licensed professional counselor with years of direct clinical experience working with individuals, couples, and families. Noble Ruins grows directly out of that work — out of sitting across from people in their most honest moments and learning what it actually takes to move forward.

The BCSHLW framework isn't a theory developed and then tested. It's a distillation of what works — in the room, over time, with real people carrying real weight.

His work is grounded in attachment theory and neuroscience, shaped by Christian faith, and oriented toward a single conviction: that people are worth the patient, careful work of restoration.

Ryan works at New Life Resources in Waukesha, WI.

IN DEVELOPMENT

The framework is becoming a full ecosystem of tools.

Noble Ruins is developing a suite of resources built around the BCSHLW framework — for individuals, couples, clinicians, and communities. Follow along as these take shape.

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Tools for Clinical Use

For practitioners and clinicians building formation-oriented practice.

Resources for Individuals & Couples

For anyone doing the honest work of relational growth and restoration.

A Narrative Ecosystem

Content and long-form work rooted in the worldview of Noble Ruins.

Formation Experiences

Retreats and workshops for communities and ministry organizations.