The Theory of Biographical Causality
“We all have the same problems: the ones we got ourselves into.”

This theory proposes that the majority of obstacles we face in adult life are not random events or “bad luck,” but rather the logical outcome of a chain of prior decisions. It suggests that human beings are the architects of their own labyrinths.
1. The Premise: The Self-Designed Labyrinth
Unlike natural tragedies (earthquakes, genetic diseases), daily “problems” (debt, toxic relationships, lack of time, work stress) are usually delayed consequences. The theory holds that a current problem is simply the final phase of a decision made months or years ago.
2. The Foundation: Why is it real?
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The Law of Behavioral ROI (Return on Investment): Every time we say “yes” to something we don’t want, or “no” to a responsibility, we are planting a future problem. Problems don’t just “arrive”; they are cultivated.
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External Attribution Bias: Psychologically, we tend to blame fate for our failures while claiming credit for our successes. This phrase breaks that bias and restores our agency.
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Logical Support: If 90% of your current problems would disappear if you could travel back in time and change your own actions, then the theory is proven: the problem is the result of your entry into the system.
3. Practical Application: The Entry Filter
If we accept this theory, our behavior shifts radically:
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Radical Responsibility: You stop asking, “Why is this happening to me?” and start asking, “How did I allow this into my life?”
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Problem Prevention: Before making a decision, you ask yourself: “Do I want to manage the consequences of this problem in six months?” If the answer is no, you don’t enter.


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