Life Between Systems
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- $2.99
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- $2.99
Publisher Description
We move through systems every day, often without noticing them. Family, education, work, technology, healthcare, media, and culture all shape how we think, what we value, and how we understand ourselves. Most of the time, these systems feel natural. We adapt to them long before we question them.
Systems help organise life. They create structure, offer stability, and make large societies possible. But systems also simplify. They reward certain behaviours, discourage others, and influence what is seen as normal, successful, or acceptable. In doing so, they shape more than actions; they shape perception.
This book explores some of the systems that influence modern life and asks what happens when people do not fit neatly within them. What happens to curiosity in education? To autonomy in care? To identity in work? To thinking in attention-driven environments? To belonging when systems move faster than people can adapt?
The aim is not to argue that systems are good or bad, nor to suggest that life exists outside them. Few of us live entirely within one system, and few escape them completely. Most of us move between them—adapting, resisting, participating, and questioning.
Living between systems is not always comfortable. It can create uncertainty, but it can also make something visible: that many things we take for granted are not fixed truths, but habits, structures, and expectations shaped by context.
Perhaps awareness changes little on the surface. Systems remain. Rules remain. Responsibilities remain.
But seeing them clearly changes the relationship we have with them.
And sometimes, that is enough to begin thinking differently.