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Why does harm continue even after the system starts listening? This video looks at what happens after recognition, advocacy, and engagement begin — and why those things often fail to produce safety, stability, or resolution. Many people assume that once a system listens, things should improve. In practice, what often follows is prolonged uncertainty, fragmented responsibility, and slow erosion — even when no one involved is acting with bad intent. This video explores: • why being heard doesn’t necessarily stop harm • how large systems operate through procedure rather than care • why waiting is not neutral, but destabilising • how emotional reactions are misread without context • and why stress persists even for families and advocates This is not an attack on individuals working within these systems. It’s an attempt to explain how harm can be generated structurally — through delay, fragmentation, and unresolved processes — even when communication is clear and legitimacy is granted. If you’ve ever sensed that something was wrong long before you could fully explain it, this video is an attempt to name that experience. ⸻ About this channel This channel explores disability, psychology, systems, and lived experience — not from a motivational or inspirational angle, but from a practical and analytical one. The videos are delivered using a digital stand-in for Jacko, due to the unpredictable physical demands of recording with a disability. The aim is consistency and clarity rather than performance. If these topics are useful or interesting to you, you’re welcome to follow along.