Question
How do I practice error patterns?
Quick Answer
Identify one error you have made at least three times in the past six months — a repeated mistake, a recurring frustration, a pattern of falling short. Write down each instance with enough detail to compare them. Then ask, for each instance: What conditions were present every time? What structural.
The most direct way to practice error patterns is through a focused exercise: Identify one error you have made at least three times in the past six months — a repeated mistake, a recurring frustration, a pattern of falling short. Write down each instance with enough detail to compare them. Then ask, for each instance: What conditions were present every time? What structural element — a missing checklist, a flawed process, a broken handoff, an absent reminder — would have prevented all three occurrences? Write a one-sentence system fix. Do not write a one-sentence personal resolution. The fix should change the environment, not your willpower.
Common pitfall: Recognizing the pattern but still locating the cause inside yourself. You notice you always procrastinate on financial tasks, but instead of examining the system — maybe the tools are confusing, the information is scattered across three apps, or you lack a trigger that initiates the process — you conclude that you are 'bad with money' or 'need more discipline.' Pattern recognition without structural attribution is just a more sophisticated form of self-blame. The point is not to notice the pattern. The point is to follow the pattern to the system flaw that produces it.
This practice connects to Phase 25 (Error Correction) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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