Observed Patterns

Founders

Two people, one discovery, built from opposite directions.

Tina Witowski
Tina's crest
The Founder

Tina Witowski

Sicamous, BC · 1982

Tina Witowski grew up in Sicamous, BC, knowing from the start she was meant to work with people. She studied Human Services, saw the cracks in the field before she finished, and carried the ambition long after she left school. The credential didn't happen. The drive never stopped. She stopped waiting for permission. Working alongside Warren as the framework took shape, something clicked — the same architecture that explained system drift also explained the burnout, the broken communication, and the policy failures she had been watching for years. SOMA was the answer she had been building toward without knowing it. The work she set out to do — done her way.

"The credential didn't happen. The work did."

Vita et Gratia
Warren C. Sholtz
Warren's crest
The Architect

Warren C. Sholtz

Yellowknife, NWT · 1979

Warren Christopher Sholtz grew up in a world that required paying attention to survive. The public library was his real school. 2E, Autodidact, learning by doing from the beginning. His unconventional path was not a detour. It was the road. In December 2025, working from his phone in Port Alberni, BC, he formalized what he had been doing naturally for decades — a complete mathematical framework for anticipatory cognition. Filed, timestamped, and protected.

"I don't need an argument to make change."

Tenebo et Conscia Mens Recti

Two different starting points. The same underlying discovery: lack of common ground causes conflict, intended or imagined — and communication can be that common ground.

We're not coaches, and this isn't coaching. Observed Patterns teaches the structure underneath self-awareness — the actual mechanics of how attention, communication, and relationship work, not advice about how to feel better or perform differently. What we build is a vocabulary for patterns that are already running, whether or not anyone's named them yet.

That teaching follows one standard, in everything we make: S.M.E. — Slow. Methodical. Ethical. Go slow. Follow the sequence. Build things that hold up under real use, not just first impressions.

Tina and Warren built this from two directions that turned out to be the same direction all along.

Come hang out with us

Fair warning: these are our real personal accounts, not polished brand pages. Expect actual life, the occasional curse word, and zero pretending we've got it all figured out.

Tina Witowski
Tina Witowski
@tinawitowski

Also probably doing my makeup — it's part of my me-time before taking on the day.

Warren C. Sholtz
Warren C. Sholtz
@thraxmagusmaxus @Observed-Patterns

Mostly comedy and chaos over here. You've been warned.