The Tricomponentism Book
This book presents a framework for understanding how experience forms, holds, and changes over time.
It focuses on the underlying structure of situations, not as abstract theory, but as something that can be observed directly in everyday life.
Rather than explaining events in terms of intention or personal control, the book examines how situations actually unfold.
It describes how outcomes are shaped by three interacting elements:
the structure that allows something to persist
the pressures that act on it and define its limits
the processes through which it adapts or changes
These elements are not specific to one type of experience.
They appear across individual decisions, relationships, and larger systems.
What This Book Covers
The book explains how situations develop and stabilize, how pressure reveals constraints, and how change emerges when those constraints are reached.
It also examines how different outcomes can arise from similar conditions, depending on how these elements interact.
A central part of the book is clarifying the role of awareness, not as something that directs events, but as the point at which they become visible.
What Makes It Different
This is not a book about beliefs, advice, or interpretation.
It does not argue for a position or propose a system to follow.
Its purpose is to describe patterns that are already present, whether they are recognized or not.
Coming Soon
The full book is currently in development.