Why the System Won’t Change
A reflection on systemic inertia, the limits of helping professions, and the challenges for high-capacity thinkers.
Throughout this piece, I use the term “high-bandwidth Mavericks” and similar. If you’re more familiar with the language of giftedness or gifted individuals, you can mentally substitute that framing here. The label is not accurate, but the underlying experience overlaps more than the terminology suggests.

There’s a certain irony in calling someone a “helper,” “therapist,” or “coach” within a system they cannot escape. I was reflecting on a recent Substack note by Susan Fransen that emphasized the importance of working from the perspective of the other person rather than the system. On the surface, this seems rather obvious. After all, empathy requires stepping into another person’s shoes. But if you pause for a moment, a paradox emerges: those who are not themselves high-capacity thinkers, or “high bandwidth Mavericks,” can never truly inhabit the perspective of those who are. They can only interpret it through the lens of the system that trained them, filtered through its own rules and assumptions. In other words, what looks like perspective-taking is often just highly sophisticated system knowledge.
This became painfully clear yesterday in a conversation with another organization I run, one entrenched in the familiar EU bureaucracy of no-funding, endless proposals, and procedural BS theater. Everyone performs their roles with remarkable confidence, insisting that they “support innovation” or “help people grow.” Yet, if you watch closely, the same patterns repeat: each player defers, each decision is system-bound, each promise to change is ultimately a temporary adjustment to protect the system’s continuity. No one ever truly steps outside it, nor is there the incentive to do so (monthly salary payments never stop do they). And while they call themselves helpers/supporters, the reality is that they help the system perpetuate itself, not the people or ideas the system claims to serve.
It’s fascinating to note that this is not a failure of character. It is a structural inevitability. Think about it, systems do not change in the way individuals hope they do. They adapt, surely, but only to preserve themselves, to minimize negative outcomes that could threaten their own stability. Any notion that the “system must change” is always a self-delusion, a way of postponing the inconvenient truth that the structural constraints are permanent. The system evolves its edges, but its core remains intact, and anyone who plays inside it, no matter how well-intentioned that person might be, cannot truly transcend it.
For high bandwidth Mavericks, this poses a unique challenge. The world does not bend for visionaries; it bends around the system. To operate effectively, one must recognize that true leverage does not come from expecting the system to shift under your feet. It comes from understanding it coldly, navigating it strategically, and occasionally (if the risk is worth it) sidestepping it entirely. Ironically, the very people who think they are helping may be the least equipped to see this, because their training ensures they are always looking through a lens of system compliance.
Perhaps the most liberating realization is that change is not a systemic event. Instead, it is much more of a selective and (often) lonely act. High bandwidth Mavericks who try to create meaningful shifts must accept that the “helpers” within the system will rarely assist you in any substantive way. Their role is not necessarily to hinder, while remarkably good at doing so, but to illustrate the limits of what the system can do comfortably. And so, the lesson becomes crystal clear: stop waiting for the system to evolve. Accept its inertia. Work where it allows, circumvent where necessary, and measure your victories not by systemic adoption but by the impact on the actual people and ideas that matter.
Ultimately, this is the quiet, ironic truth of the modern helping/supporting profession: the system remains unmoved, the helpers are often system-bound, and the high-capacity thinkers (those who see beyond the procedural 3D-script veil) are left to navigate a world that fundamentally cannot change. And that, perhaps, is the real test of perspective.
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Mooie reflectie! En zeker eens! Misschien heb ik af en toe nog de illusie of hoop dat er mogelijkheid is...