Life OS

Seven domains.
One honest map.

Most people navigate their lives from a partial picture.

They know some things are working. They sense others aren't. But they've never seen it all at once — every domain, honestly placed, at the same time.

Without that picture, it's hard to know where to focus. Easy to keep processing what's wrong instead of building what's next.

Orienteering changes that.


A guided conversation about the full terrain of your life.

Every area that matters, seen together as a whole.

Not what you're achieving. Not how productive you've been. Where you actually are — and what that means for where you're going.

  • Path — the work you're here to do
  • Spark — aliveness, creativity, what lights you up
  • Body — physical health, energy, how you inhabit your physical life
  • Finances — resources, security, your relationship with money
  • Relationships — connection, belonging, the people around you
  • Inner Game — your relationship with yourself, your emotional landscape
  • Outer Game — how you show up, your presence and impact in the world

Each one rated honestly. Each one seen in relation to the others.


Why all seven at once matters.

Domains don't exist in isolation. A below-threshold score in one area drains the others — quietly, structurally, regardless of how hard you work in the areas that are already functioning.

Seeing all seven together reveals patterns that are invisible when you address them one at a time. Where the real drag is coming from. Where focus would create movement everywhere else.

The map shows you what to look at. Not what to do — that's yours to determine. But where to look, and why.


What you leave with.

  • A completed wheel — your seven domains placed honestly on a 0–10 scale.
  • Your Horizon Goals — a clear picture of what 10/10 looks like in each domain, in your words, for your life.
  • Your focus domains — the three areas that most need your attention right now, with resourcing and next steps matched to where you actually are.
  • A clear direction. Not a prescription — an orientation.

And something that's harder to name but consistently reported: a shift. From processing what's wrong to building what's next. From the partial picture to the whole one. From wondering what's possible to beginning to see it.


From the field.

High level vision. Someone who will shift you out of emotional processing / analysis / healing mode and into 'what's next, what are you building, what does your future look like' — who will treat you as someone capable of operating at a high level and holds you to that standard. Which moves you toward growth edges that have otherwise felt out of reach.
— B.G.B.
The work we've done has peeled back the narrative that said 'I can't do that' and revealed another world of possibility. I feel like I've been liberated.
— C.W.
Nik makes you look deeper and ask yourself the questions you rarely explore. He guides you into seeing yourself more clearly and thus you start truly knowing yourself. From this you can make the necessary adjustments to start moving forward in your life.
— E.L.

The experience.

A short guided conversation that places each domain honestly on the wheel. No performance. No right answers. The only measure is accuracy — how close to true can you get?

From that honesty, the picture emerges. Most people find it more clarifying than they expected. Some find it confronting in the best possible way.

The orientation conversation is the intervention. The map is what you take with you.


Where this fits.

Orienteering addresses the orientation gap — the space between having the capacity to move and knowing where you actually are.

Without a map, development is reactive. You address whatever is loudest. Patterns stay invisible. Energy goes to the wrong places.

With a map, you can move from clarity. That's a different kind of movement entirely.