Name patterns in 2-4 words that compress the trigger-response sequence into a detectable label
Name behavioral patterns using 2-4 word descriptors that compress the full trigger-response sequence into a recognizable label, enabling real-time pattern recognition under cognitive load.
Why This Is a Rule
An unnamed pattern is invisible during execution. You're inside it — experiencing the trigger, performing the response, feeling the consequence — but you can't see it as a pattern because you're fused with the experience. A named pattern becomes detectable: "Oh, I'm doing the deadline-panic-overcommit thing again." The name creates cognitive distance between you and the pattern, enabling intervention mid-execution.
The 2-4 word constraint serves cognitive chunking: a name must be short enough to fire as a single unit during high cognitive load. "My-tendency-to-agree-to-new-work-when-anxious-about-existing-deadlines" is a description, not a name. "Deadline panic commit" is a name — three words that compress the full trigger-response sequence into a chunk your working memory can hold and match in real time.
The name must capture the structural sequence (trigger → response), not just the content. "Overcommitment" labels the outcome. "Deadline panic commit" labels the sequence: deadline pressure triggers panic, panic triggers premature commitment. The sequence label enables earlier detection — you can catch the panic before the commit, not just after.
When This Fires
- After identifying a recurring behavioral pattern through journaling or tracking (Three occurrences in 30 days = pattern candidate, not coincidence — investigate structurally)
- When you notice the same reaction sequence for the third time
- During self-reflection when you want to make an invisible pattern catchable
- Any recurring avoidance, reaction, or decision pattern that you want to interrupt
Common Failure Mode
Naming the outcome instead of the sequence. "Procrastination" names an outcome. "Complexity avoidance spiral" names a sequence: encountering complexity → feeling overwhelmed → seeking a simpler task → returning to the complex task later with less time. The sequence name enables detection at earlier stages (feeling overwhelmed) rather than only at the outcome (deadline missed).
The Protocol
When a pattern has been identified: (1) Describe the full trigger-response sequence in one sentence. (2) Compress it to 2-4 words that capture the structural arc: [trigger word] + [response word] + optional [consequence word]. (3) Test: does the name evoke the full sequence when you hear it? Can you recognize the pattern starting by hearing the name? (4) Use the name actively in self-talk: "I notice the [pattern name] starting." The name is the intervention — it shifts you from inside the pattern to observing the pattern.