Tag Archives: Belonging

Academic Defence — Conceptual Positioning Innate Entitlement Framework™

Academic Defence: The Conceptual Foundations of the Innate Entitlement Framework™   Much of human development has been understood through models that focus either on the individual or on the environment. Some emphasise internal processes — cognition, emotion, and regulation. Others emphasise external conditions — attachment, caregiving, and context. Both perspectives offer important insights. Yet neither […]

Series 03 — Biological Belonging™: The Emergence of Being Met by Life

New readers may wish to begin with: Why the Innate Entitlement Framework™ Matters Previous: Series 02 — Innate Entitlement™: The Emergence of Biological Expectancy For deeper conceptual positioning, see: Academic Defence — The Conceptual Foundations of the Innate Entitlement Framework™   Receiving begins the developmental process. Innate Entitlement™ emerges as biological expectancy. And when that […]

We Are Received Before We Relate

Before we learn how to speak, before we understand who we are, something profound has already happened. We have been given life. Not earned. Not chosen. Not negotiated. Received. And this matters more than we often realise. Because receiving is not passive. The body does not simply take in life and remain unchanged. It responds. […]

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