Power Is Not What We Think It Is
We tend to recognise power only when it becomes visible. War. Elections. Leaders. Collapse. Moments where something clearly shifts, where the outcome is undeniable and immediate. It creates the impression that power is exercised in bursts, appearing only in decisive events and then fading back into the background. But that is only the surface. Most of the time, power is not loud. It is not dramatic. It does not announce itself. It sits quietly beneath systems, shaping outcomes long before they become visible. It determines what is possible, what is likely, and what is almost unthinkable. By the time power is obvious, it has usually already done its work. 1 - The Structures Beneath the Surface. Across history, very different civilisations have followed similar patterns. They organise resources. They build systems of control. They create narratives that justify authority. They expand when conditions allow.They fracture when those systems begin to fail. Ancient Egypt, imperial Rome, medieval Europe, and modern nation-states. Different languages. Different technologies. Different beliefs. The same underlying architecture. This is the part of history that is rarely taught directly. We are shown events, but not the framework that produces them. We see the fall of an empire, but not the slow erosion of the systems that sustained it. We see leaders rise, but not the conditions that made their rise possible. Power is not just something people hold. It is something systems produce. 2 - Why Power Often Feels Invisible. One of the reasons power is so difficult to recognise is because it works best when it is accepted. When a system feels natural, it rarely needs to explain itself. When authority feels legitimate, it rarely needs to enforce itself constantly. When structures are stable, they become background. This is where narrative becomes essential. People do not live inside systems alone. They live inside explanations of those systems. Ideas about nation, identity, justice, progress, tradition, belief. These are not separate from power. They are part of it.