Julian Alexander is the originator of the RRSM (Rhythmic Regulatory Systems Model) and SRM (Systematic Rhythmic Medicine).
His work focuses on a specific problem:
why systems with similar structure and treatment conditions produce different stability and recovery outcomes.
This work emerged from sustained investigation into limitations within current structural and biochemical interpretations of health and system behaviour.
The objective is not to replace existing models. It is to address a consistent gap:
the role of rhythmic coordination in determining system stability is underrepresented and often unmeasured.
SRM is not a medical treatment or intervention. It is a structural interpretive framework designed to examine the conditions under which recovery and stability improve or fail.
If current models fully explain stability and recovery variability, then this framework is unnecessary. If they do not, then this is worth examining.
Julian engages in structured discussion, critical evaluation, and collaborative examination of the RRSM/SRM framework. He is open to conversations with researchers, clinicians, and platforms willing to explore or challenge the model.
Why it Exist
Why this framework was developed:
Existing models describe structure but often underrepresent coordination across time.
Stability is commonly treated as static rather than dynamically maintained.
This framework explores organisation through rhythm as a governing principle.