Everything changes.
Except the way we live with each other.
From the formation of the Earth to the emergence of life, from the rise of human societies to the complexity of modern civilisation, one truth remains constant: change is the fundamental condition of existence.
And yet, in one crucial respect, humanity has not changed.
We continue to divide, to compete, to take rather than share-despite overwhelming evidence that we are all part of the same fragile system, living on the same planet, for a limited time.
The Book of Changes explores this contradiction.
Moving from the cosmic to the personal, it traces the story of change across the universe, through evolution, and into the structures of human life. It examines how identity, belief, culture, and the ego reinforce patterns that resist change-even when those patterns are destructive.
But this is not a book of theory alone.
It turns inward to ask a deeper question:
If change is inevitable, how can we live with it?
Through a clear and grounded exploration of awareness, acceptance, and direct experience, the book points toward a different way of relating to life-one not based on resistance, but on understanding, presence, and a quiet sense of gratitude for the fact of being alive at all.
This is not a call to believe anything.
It is an invitation to look.
Related Subjects
Philosophy