Feb 5, 2026
Three Moves for Making Sense of Experience
Reflection Partner supports three moves: disambiguate, narrow, and orient.
1. Disambiguate
When someone brings a tangled situation to reflection, the first move is to pull the clusters apart. A single feeling often turns out to contain several. A single problem often involves competing concerns that haven’t been separated yet.
Disambiguation means identifying the distinct threads inside a confused whole. It’s not about solving anything—it’s about seeing what’s actually there. Once the pieces are laid out separately, the picture often shifts on its own.
This move is especially useful when someone feels stuck but can’t say why. The stuckness often comes from trying to respond to several things at once, as if they were one thing.
2. Narrow
After pulling things apart, the next move is to reduce the field. Not everything that’s present needs attention right now. Narrowing means identifying what matters most in this moment—what has the most energy, the most tension, or the most relevance to what someone is trying to understand.
This isn’t about dismissing what’s left out. It’s about choosing a focus so that reflection can go deeper rather than wider. Depth is where insight lives.
3. Orient
Once something has been separated and selected, the final move is to step back and ask: What does this connect to? What does it say about where I am? What does it suggest about what matters to me?
Orienting means placing the focused material in a larger context—values, patterns, history, or direction. It’s the move that turns observation into meaning.
Sometimes orienting reveals that the situation is simpler than it seemed. Sometimes it reveals that it’s more significant. Either way, the person ends up standing in a clearer relationship to their own experience.
Why AI Can Help With These Moves
These three moves—disambiguate, narrow, orient—are natural to human reflection, but they’re hard to do alone. When we’re inside our own experience, it’s difficult to see where one thread ends and another begins.
An AI trained on broad human expression can help by:
- Naming distinctions the person hasn’t yet articulated
- Suggesting which thread carries the most weight
- Offering frameworks or language that help place the experience in a wider context
The human always decides what fits. The AI offers structure; the person provides the truth.
Two Modes in the App
Reflection Partner includes two modes that map to these moves:
- Untangle — Supports disambiguation and narrowing. Helps the user separate what’s tangled and find the thread that matters most right now.
- Orient — Supports the orienting move. Helps the user step back from focused material and connect it to broader patterns, values, or direction.