Say it out loud once. Watch what repeats get named.
The decision has been in your head for two weeks. You've rehearsed both sides so many times the argument has worn a groove. What began as a choice has turned into a loop, and the loop is louder than either option.
Said out loud, once, in a place that remembers — the decision starts to change shape. Not because you got new information. Because you finally heard which parts of your own reasoning you've said before, in different words, about different decisions.
What repeats in how you decide is often more revealing than what you decide. The through-line is the pattern. The through-line is what needs to be seen.
- —The pros-and-cons list is drafted. You already know which side you'll pick and you're not moving.
- —Every friend you ask hears a slightly edited version of the question.
- —You keep looking for the answer in more information. The answer isn't in more information.
- —You know this kind of decision from before. You want it to go differently this time and don't know what "differently" means.
- —Once said out loud, the decision sounds like the last one you regretted.
You do not need someone to tell you what to choose. You need something outside your own weather that remembers how you sounded the last three times you were choosing. That's not advice. That is your reasoning, given back to you with the through-line intact — the part your memory would rather smooth over.
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.
Three minutes is enough to say the decision out loud once. Not to resolve it. To hear which parts of it you have said before, and to notice what has been quietly repeating underneath.
The reset is where the loop gets interrupted at the level of how you choose, not what you choose.
Begin the three-minute reset →