Essays
Every event we host is designed with intention, from the atmosphere we create to the way each session flows.
Welcome. This is where I write about the parts of life most people feel but rarely name — identity shifts, reinvention, the psychology of becoming, the collapse of old narratives, and the quiet transformations happening beneath the surface of everyday life.
My essays live at the intersection of applied psychology, lived experience, and the new world we’re all trying to understand. I write about what it means to outgrow an old self, to rebuild after loss, to navigate uncertainty, to discover new capability, and to evolve in a world that’s changing faster than the stories we were given.
I don’t write to inspire.
I write to tell the truth — the kind that helps people recognize themselves in the middle of their own transition.
You’ll find pieces here on identity, reinvention, human behavior, cultural shifts, and the future of how we live and work. Some essays are personal. Some are analytical. All of them come from the same place: an honest attempt to understand who we’re becoming and what it takes to build a life that fits the person we are now.
If you’re navigating change, searching for clarity, or simply trying to make sense of the world and your place in it, you’re in the right place.
The Psychology of Work in the Collapse Era
Work isn’t just changing. It’s destabilizing people from the inside out.
What we’re living through doesn’t show up in job reports or optimistic headlines. It shows up as identity disruption, nervous system strain, and a growing sense that the rules changed without warning. People who did everything “right” now feel untethered, not because they failed, but because the systems they relied on quietly collapsed.
This isn’t burnout. It’s a structural shift in how work shapes identity, security, and meaning. AI acceleration, economic instability, and the erosion of predictable career paths are converging faster than humans can adapt. Work is simply where the impact is felt first.
The problem isn’t personal weakness.
It’s systemic collapse.
And understanding that distinction is the first step toward rebuilding something that actually fits the world we’re living in.