The pattern does not
disappear because
you can see it.
CRR is not the next level of the Trisphereon. It is the work beneath all three levels — the cognitive reflex architecture that produces the patterns TR2 taught you to read, and that requires a different category of intervention to permanently reroute.
Cognitive Reflex Recognition
TR2 showed you
the pattern. CRR
addresses the wiring.
At TR2, you developed the ability to read patterns — to see the recurring behaviours, decisions, and outcomes that your current operating system reliably produces. That is a significant achievement. It is also, for many people, where the development stalls.
Seeing a pattern is not the same as changing it. The cognitive reflexes that produce automatic behaviour — the responses that fire before conscious thought reaches the situation — are not dismantled through insight. They are not addressed through awareness alone. They require a specific, structured process of recognition, interruption, and permanent rerouting that sits outside the scope of the Trisphereon's three levels.
"You can understand exactly why a reflex fires and still find it firing. The work of CRR is not understanding. It is the deliberate, structural replacement of the automatic response with something you have chosen."
CRR is delivered as a bespoke intensive process — not a programme with a fixed structure, but a direct and sustained engagement with the specific reflex architecture of a specific person. The timeline, format, and depth are determined by what is actually there, not by what a standard programme duration can accommodate.
Three phases. One permanent outcome.
Recognition.
Interruption.
Rerouting.
CRR is not a model you learn. It is a process you undergo. The three phases are sequential — each one builds on the last, and none can be manufactured or accelerated beyond the pace the individual's specific reflex architecture requires.
The precise identification of the reflex — not the behaviour it produces, but the trigger, the automatic response, and the specific conditions in which it fires. Most people who reach CRR can describe their patterns in general terms. Phase One produces something more specific: the exact architecture of the reflex, mapped with the precision required to interrupt it.
This phase requires more time than most people expect, because the reflexes that most need addressing are the ones most thoroughly integrated into a person's self-concept. They do not identify as reflexes. They identify as personality, preference, or justified response.
The deliberate and sustained practice of catching the reflex at the point of firing — before the automatic behaviour has been produced, in the moment between stimulus and response. Interruption is not suppression. It is the development of a specific awareness that creates a gap where there was previously none.
The gap is initially small and unreliable. Under high-stress conditions, the reflex will continue to fire. Phase Two builds the interruption capacity through structured repetition in conditions of progressive difficulty until the gap is consistent — present even in the environments that most reliably trigger the original response.
The installation of a chosen response in the space the interruption has created. Rerouting is not the replacement of an automatic response with a deliberate one — that is Phase Two territory. Rerouting is the development of a new automatic response: a reflex that fires in place of the old one, that has been practised to the point of automaticity, and that continues to operate without conscious maintenance.
When Phase Three is complete, the old reflex does not return under pressure. The new response has been embedded at the same depth as the original. This is the only outcome CRR accepts as finished work.
The four reflex categories
Where the automatic
response is producing
the wrong outcome.
Cognitive reflexes present across four primary categories. Most individuals carry at least one dominant reflex in each — and one that is significantly more costly than the others. CRR identifies the primary reflex architecture before beginning the process.
Automatic responses to perceived threat — real or constructed. The reflex that fires when authority challenges your position. The response that activates when a relationship dynamic triggers the original wound. The behaviour that emerges under performance pressure regardless of how much you have prepared. Threat reflexes are among the most embedded because they developed earliest and were reinforced most consistently.
The person whose threat reflex fires in high-stakes situations will consistently underperform precisely when performance matters most.
Automatic responses to the need to matter — to be seen, validated, positioned above others, or protected from the evidence that you are not as significant as the story requires. Significance reflexes produce a specific pattern: decisions made not on the basis of what will produce the best outcome, but on the basis of what will confirm the required self-image. They are particularly costly in leadership contexts, where they reliably produce the wrong call at the critical moment.
The leader whose significance reflex drives decisions will optimise for their own narrative at the expense of the organisation's actual results.
Automatic responses to discomfort — the reflex that moves away from the conversation that needs to happen, the decision that needs to be made, the feedback that needs to be given. Avoidance reflexes are the most socially acceptable category because the behaviours they produce are often interpreted as patience, diplomacy, or measured thinking. They are not. They are the automatic deferral of the difficult thing until the cost of deferring it becomes unavoidable.
The person whose avoidance reflex is dominant will pay for every difficult conversation they have delayed at the interest rate the delay has accumulated.
Automatic responses to uncertainty — the reflex that reaches for control when the environment becomes unpredictable, that micromanages when delegation would produce better results, that resists the process designed by someone else because submitting to it activates an intolerable sense of dependency. Control reflexes are particularly present in high performers, because the capability that produced their success also produced a reflex that cannot tolerate the conditions in which the next level of development requires them to surrender it.
The high performer with a dominant control reflex has built the ceiling they are now pressing against with every capability they possess.
The pattern is seen. The reflex still fires.Three kinds of person who need this work.
You completed TR2. You can name the pattern, trace it to its source, and predict when it will appear. And it still appears. You have the insight without the structural change. That gap — between knowing and changing — is precisely what CRR addresses, and it requires a different process than the one that produced the insight.
Your performance in normal conditions is not the problem. The reflex only fully expresses itself under pressure — in the high-stakes conversation, the critical decision, the crisis that requires the person you have developed to be present rather than the reflex that developed first. CRR is specifically designed for this gap: the person who performs well until the conditions activate the automatic response that performance alone cannot override.
Therapy. Coaching. Development programmes. All of which produced insight, some of which produced temporary change, none of which produced the permanent structural shift the problem requires. CRR is not therapy, coaching, or a programme. It is a specific process targeting a specific architecture. If the reflex is still firing after everything else, it is because everything else was aimed at a different level of the problem.
Bespoke. By application.The depth of the work
determines the scope
of the engagement.
CRR does not have a fixed duration or a standard price. The scope of the engagement is determined by the reflex architecture that is actually present — what it will take to complete all three phases to the standard of permanent rerouting, not the standard of improved awareness.
CRR is available alongside or after any level of the Trisphereon. It does not require TR3 to be complete, though the depth of work at TR1 and TR2 significantly accelerates the recognition phase. If you are unsure whether CRR is the right intervention, the diagnostic will indicate whether reflex-level work is implicated in the pattern you are carrying.
CRR runs beneath
the entire architecture.
Foundation Getting Connected.
Transactional. The what and the how.
Transformational. The why and the want.
Transcendental. The who and the whom.
Cognitive Reflex Recognition. Deep rerouting.
"Insight is not change. You can understand a reflex with complete precision — trace it to its origin, name the trigger, predict the behaviour — and it will still fire. CRR is the work that happens after the understanding. It is the only work that produces a different automatic response."