
Two empty chairs facing diverging paths—symbolizing the quiet distance that can form as systems grow and change.
Some shifts don’t happen all at once.
They happen so gradually, we don’t notice until something feels different.
There was a time when services felt closer to people.
For some, that looked like one social worker in the community who knew families by name.
For others, it was informal support—neighbors, extended networks, people stepping in before things escalated.
More personal.
More connected to the community they served.
Over time, many of those same services grew. They scaled. They became more structured, more efficient, more standardized.
And somewhere along the way, something subtle shifted.
Not all at once.
Not loudly.
But steadily.
The Shift Most People Feel (But Don’t Always Name)
Across industries—healthcare, social services, housing, education, even cannabis—there’s a pattern that keeps showing up.
Even in newer or grassroots spaces, and in long-standing community institutions, the same progression can unfold.
Something starts with purpose—often with hope for better outcomes.
It grows to meet demand.
It becomes more organized.
And eventually, it becomes a business.
Again—this isn’t about good or bad. Growth is often necessary. Structure can bring stability.
But when systems become large enough, they begin to operate under a different set of pressures.
Efficiency.
Sustainability.
Profitability.
And those pressures shape decisions.
When Priorities Quietly Change
Most organizations don’t set out to lose their purpose.
But over time, priorities can shift.
Accountability can move—from direct connection with the people being served to broader structures like boards, funding requirements, and system-level expectations.
And slowly:
- Decisions get made based on budgets instead of lived experience
- Metrics start to matter more than individual outcomes
- Consistency replaces flexibility
- Scale replaces relationship
No single decision causes this.
It’s gradual.
And often, the people inside the system feel it too—workers trying to do good work within structures that don’t always support it.
What Gets Lost
When systems move further away from the people they serve, a few things tend to fade.
Context
People’s lives are complex. Systems work best when they can respond to that complexity.
Trust
When people feel like a number, they engage differently—or not at all.
Voice
The people most impacted often have the least influence over how systems operate.
Connection
The human element—the part that says “I see you”—becomes harder to hold onto at scale.
And over time, services can become standardized—designed to fit categories rather than individuals.
For example, someone who appears “unruly” may be directed to anger management, when what they may actually need is connection, stability, or someone who genuinely sees them.
This Isn’t About One Industry
You can see this pattern in different places:
- Small businesses becoming corporate chains
- Community-based services becoming regional or national providers
- Industries that were once relationship-driven becoming transaction-driven
Even in newer industries, like cannabis, many people have watched a shift from small, community-rooted operations to large corporate structures.
Something changes in that transition.
Not always in ways that are immediately visible—but often in ways people can feel.
What Research Is Beginning to Show
Studies across sectors have started to reflect what many people already experience:
- Larger, centralized systems often struggle to maintain personalized care
- Standardization can improve consistency—but reduce responsiveness to individual needs
- Privatization and scale can create efficiencies—but don’t always lead to better outcomes for the people being served
This doesn’t mean growth or structure is wrong.
But it does reinforce an important point:
How systems are designed—and what they are designed to prioritize—matters.
Why This Matters
Most people are trying to build stable lives inside these systems.
They’re:
- seeking care
- following rules
- trying to move forward
- doing their best with what’s available
When systems are clear and responsive, people can move forward.
When they’re not, people don’t just struggle—they stall.
Not because they’re unwilling.
But because the path itself becomes harder to navigate.
A Moment to Pause
This isn’t about assigning blame.
Systems evolve for many reasons—policy decisions, funding structures, demand, economics, growth.
But it is worth noticing what’s happening.
Because when we can see something clearly, we can respond to it differently.
As individuals.
As communities.
And over time, as part of shaping what comes next.
A Question to Sit With
As more parts of daily life become structured around efficiency and profit, it’s worth asking:
What do we want to make sure doesn’t get lost?
Not in theory.
In practice.
In the way people are treated.
In the way decisions are made.
In the way systems show up in real lives.
There’s no single answer here.
Just an invitation to notice.
And to think about what matters—before it quietly slips out of reach.
Research
For those who want to explore this further, here are a few sources that reflect similar patterns across sectors:
- In the Public Interest. The Costs of Privatization.
- Justice Policy Institute. Gaming the System.
- National Institute of Mental Health. Mental Health Care in the United States.
Donna Ewing Marto
LUV Solutions
Thoughts for the Journey
Part of the Data with Soul series.
🌻
If something here stayed with you, you don’t have to leave it there.
If you’re looking for a way to slow things down, get clear, and move forward with intention, you may want to explore:
- Pathway to Purpose — a structured way to step back, understand where you are, and define what comes next
- Weathering the Storm — A Guided Reset — for when things feel heavy, unclear, or off track
- LUV Life Positioning Framework — a simple way to see what’s working, what’s not, and where to focus
You don’t have to choose everything.
Just start with what fits.
Not sure where to start?
You can begin with a short reflection to get a clearer sense of what you need right now → Start the Reflection
