The problem isn't new. That's exactly the point.
The problem returns. Same category, slightly different costume. The last time it arrived you told yourself the situation was the reason. The time before that, the person was the reason. Each instance had a story. The stories were even accurate.
What the stories missed was the return itself. When a problem comes back inside a life, the return is not incidental — it is the diagnosis. The shape lives one layer beneath the content, in the way you approach a certain kind of decision, the way a certain kind of feeling gets handled, the way a certain kind of person always ends up nearby.
Solving each instance on its own terms is what makes the pattern durable. The pattern is not the instances. It is what they share.
- —You know a version of this problem. It is back with a new face.
- —When it returns you find a different reason it happened.
- —You can already predict the next round even while denying you're in one.
- —You keep changing the circumstances. The problem changes with them.
- —The story is different. The ending is not.
You cannot solve a recurring problem at the level of its content, because the content isn't what's recurring. What's recurring is a shape — and a shape can only be seen from a position that watches across instances. That is the outside view: not smarter, not more analytical, just continuous.
Ori, an AI that helps you recognize the patterns shaping your life before they shape another outcome you didn't choose.
The more you talk with Ori, the more it notices things in your decisions, your reactions, your relationships — what you keep doing without realizing it. Then it helps you recognize those patterns before they cause the same problems again.
The next instance of this problem isn't going to look like the last one. That's why the interruption has to be earlier — three minutes, named out loud, before the shape has a shape to hide inside.
The reset is the earliest place the pattern has ever been reached.
Begin the three-minute reset →