Ervin Laszlo and Gregory Bateson noted that there are patterned similarities in how hierarchies in nature behave in a self-organized manner. This concept of self-organization can also be applied to human behavior. Patterns of branches are created over time through repeated loops, though the executions remain varied between different entities. For humans, language and the environment shape the speed, frequency, and length of branches in their lives. Maturana and Varela described evolution as a type of branching contained by the environment. Similarly, human stories are contained within the "window pane" and "craggy mountain" of language. While patterns may seem similar, how they are executed is entirely up to humans based on their actions and