The Definition of Normal
The Pressure to Fit In
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ナレーター:
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Eddie Leonard Jr.
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著者:
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Heinrich Wilson
What is normal? And more importantly… who decided that for you?
From the moment you are born, expectations are already in place. How you should live, how you should look, what you should achieve. Most people never question it. They follow what feels natural. But what feels natural is often just repetition.
Normal is not fixed. It never has been. It changes with time, culture, technology, and exposure. What was once expected disappears. What once seemed strange becomes accepted. These shifts rarely happen with resistance. They settle in quietly, replacing one standard with another while people continue to believe that what they are experiencing is stable.
The way people compare themselves has changed as well. It is no longer limited to neighbors or coworkers. Today, comparison is constant and global. People measure themselves against actors, influencers, and carefully presented lives on screens. What is seen repeatedly begins to feel like the standard, even when it does not represent reality.
At the same time, the pressure has become more complex. You are expected to fit in, stand out, adapt, and accept, often all at once. What once provided direction now creates tension. The standard is no longer clear, yet the expectation to respond to it remains.
Technology has accelerated this shift. Communication, relationships, and expectations have all changed within a short period of time. What was optional is now expected. What was expected is already outdated. And now, for the first time, the standard is no longer shaped only by people. It is influenced by systems that operate differently, setting new expectations for speed, output, and even interaction.
The question is no longer whether something is normal. The question is whether you can afford to go against it.
©2026 Heinrich Wilson (P)2026 Heinrich Wilson