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Human-centred storytelling that helps explain how complex systems shape everyday life


Why So Many People Need the Gym
Gyms are officially places for exercise, but that description barely captures what they became in modern society. Gyms now sit at the intersection of health, insecurity, discipline, ageing, loneliness, identity, social media, masculinity, self-improvement and urban life. People walk into gyms carrying far more than weights and workout plans. They carry stress, ambition, heartbreak, anxiety, routine and the feeling that modern life slowly pushes the body in the wrong direction


Online Learning Promised to Change Education Forever. Reality Became More Complicated
For years, e-learning and educational technology were presented almost like the future arriving early. Laptops in classrooms, online courses, learning apps, recorded lectures and AI-powered tutoring systems promised to democratise knowledge globally. A child in rural Kenya could theoretically access lessons from world-class institutions. A worker in Brazil could retrain online after work. A university lecture from Harvard University could suddenly reach millions of people thr


Offices Changed the Way Human Beings Live, Dress and Think About Time
For millions of people, the office became the defining environment of adult life. Entire generations woke up, travelled into cities, sat beneath fluorescent lighting, answered emails, attended meetings and returned home again according to rhythms shaped by office culture. Yet offices are relatively new in historical terms. Human beings spent most of history farming, trading, building, fighting or working physically outdoors before large numbers of people began spending their

How Do Systems Shape Everyday Life?
From housing and healthcare to food, travel, and technology, Stories of Business examines the systems and incentives behind the things we take for granted.

The Hidden Systems Behind Everyday Life
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Why Do Candles Still Matter in an Electrified World?
Candles should probably have disappeared by now. Modern societies built electrical grids, LED lighting, smartphones, floodlights and giant illuminated cities powerful enough to turn night into something close to daytime. Yet candles remain everywhere. They sit inside churches, bedrooms, restaurants, spas, temples, emergency cupboards, vigils and birthday cakes across the world. Human beings still return to small controlled flames even after inventing systems capable of elimin


What Socks Reveal About Industry, Comfort and Everyday Life
Socks are among the most ordinary objects in modern life, yet they sit inside surprisingly large systems involving industrial manufacturing, military history, fashion, labour, hygiene, sport, global trade and daily human comfort. Most people barely think about socks unless they are missing, wet, torn or uncomfortable. But that invisibility is precisely what makes them interesting. Socks belong to the category of products modern societies depend on constantly while rarely noti


How Tweed Became a Global Symbol of Heritage, Class and Rugged Elegance
Tweed is more than fabric. It is one of those rare materials that became deeply tied to identity, geography, class, masculinity, countryside mythology, academia, politics and fashion all at once. A tweed jacket immediately signals something beyond clothing itself. It suggests tradition, intellect, rural life, old institutions, durability or heritage depending on who is wearing it and where. Few fabrics carry so much cultural meaning through texture alone. Originally, tweed em


Sun Loungers and the Business of Claiming a Patch of Paradise
Sun loungers look like one of the simplest objects in tourism. A reclining chair beside a pool, a folded bed on a beach, a towel spread across plastic or wood, sunglasses placed on top to mark temporary ownership. But sun loungers reveal far more than comfort. They expose how tourism turns space, status, timing, money, behaviour and human territorial instincts into a daily ritual. Around pools and beaches from Spain to Greece, Turkey, Egypt, Dubai, the Caribbean and the Canar


Why So Many People Need the Gym
Gyms are officially places for exercise, but that description barely captures what they became in modern society. Gyms now sit at the intersection of health, insecurity, discipline, ageing, loneliness, identity, social media, masculinity, self-improvement and urban life. People walk into gyms carrying far more than weights and workout plans. They carry stress, ambition, heartbreak, anxiety, routine and the feeling that modern life slowly pushes the body in the wrong direction


Most People Only Notice Stretching Once Their Body Starts Complaining
Stretching looks deceptively simple. Someone reaches toward their toes, rolls their shoulders, extends their back or pulls one arm across the chest. It rarely looks dramatic or impressive compared to heavy weightlifting, sprinting or elite sport. Yet stretching sits quietly underneath enormous parts of modern life because human bodies were never designed to remain still for as long as modern systems demand. Office workers stretch after sitting for hours beneath fluorescent li


Menopause and the Systems Surrounding Women, Ageing and Modern Work
Menopause is one of the most universal biological transitions in human life, yet for decades it existed strangely hidden inside modern society. Millions of women experience it globally, but public discussion around it was historically limited, awkward or treated as private discomfort rather than a major health, workplace and social issue. In recent years that has started to change. Menopause increasingly sits at the intersection of healthcare, ageing populations, workplace cu


Vaccines: From Local Injections to Global Immunity Systems, Protection Is Coordinated
Vaccines are medical products, but they are also systems that turn biology, logistics, trust, and policy into population-level protection. An injection in a clinic in London, a rural outreach campaign in Kenya, a school programme in India, a pharmacy appointment in United States, a national rollout in Brazil, or a cold-chain delivery to remote communities in Australia all connect to the same structure: individual doses that only work fully when systems align at scale. The inj


Offices Changed the Way Human Beings Live, Dress and Think About Time
For millions of people, the office became the defining environment of adult life. Entire generations woke up, travelled into cities, sat beneath fluorescent lighting, answered emails, attended meetings and returned home again according to rhythms shaped by office culture. Yet offices are relatively new in historical terms. Human beings spent most of history farming, trading, building, fighting or working physically outdoors before large numbers of people began spending their


Armenia: The Small Mountain Nation With an Enormous History
Armenia often feels difficult to place neatly on the mental map. It sits between Europe, the Middle East, Russia and Asia while belonging fully to none of them. Mountains dominate the landscape, ancient monasteries appear on hillsides and deep historical memory runs through everyday identity. Armenia feels old not only because of its age as a civilisation, but because survival itself became central to the country’s psychology over centuries. Geography shaped Armenia from the


How Gas, Geography and History Shaped Algeria
Algeria is one of the largest and most strategically important countries in Africa, yet it often receives surprisingly limited global attention compared to countries with smaller populations or economies. Sitting on the Mediterranean directly opposite Europe, Algeria exists at the intersection of energy politics, anti-colonial history, migration systems, military power, Islamic identity, desert geography and post-colonial statehood. It is a country shaped deeply by both resis


Aluminium: The Metal Inside Airports, Beer Cans and Aircraft
Aluminium rarely attracts the attention given to oil, gold or artificial intelligence, yet modern civilisation would look completely different without it. Aircraft, power lines, skyscrapers, food packaging, smartphones, trains, cars, solar panels, military systems, construction materials and global logistics networks all depend heavily on aluminium. It is one of the foundational materials of modern industrial life, sitting invisibly inside systems people interact with every d
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