Human Systems — How the World Actually Works
In this episode, I reflect on how legal status is not only administrative — it is embodied. Residency approval did not magically solve life. It removed a major uncertainty from my nervous system’s forecast. When the future of home is unclear, the body keeps running background questions: What if this does not work? What if we have to leave? What if the systems I escaped become relevant again? This episode looks at bureaucracy as nervous-system pressure, especially for neurodivergent people, queer people, immigrants, veterans, and anyone who has lived under systems that tried to correct or contain difference. The core Human Systems insight: Paperwork is not neutral when it controls housing, residency, medical access, family stability, or the right to remain in a safe environment. Legal stability changes the body’s threat model. When uncertainty clears, even a little, the body knows. The alarm attached to the paperwork begins to leave. Themes: - residency approval as a stability signal - bureaucracy and nervous-system load - home uncertainty and embodied safety - autism as human variation, not defect - the trauma of corrective systems - Costa del Sol as a regulating environment - sovereignty, safety, and the right to build a life Oddly Robbie explores Human Systems: how policies, cultures, technologies, and environments shape the body, attention, identity, and daily life.
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