The Cult of Normalcy: Why People Defend the Status Quo

Welcome to the Cult There's a strange kind of religion most of us are born into. It doesn’t have a name, a church, or even a holy book. But it has powerful rituals. It thrives on blind faith. And its altar is built on predictability and comfort. It’s the cult of normalcy. This cult convinces us that broken systems are better than uncertain futures. That routine is safer than revolution. People don’t defend the status quo because it’s working. They defend it because it's familiar. They’ve memorized its rhythms, even when those rhythms lead nowhere. So here’s the real question: Why do people cling to systems that fail them, even when better alternatives are staring them in the face? The Psychology of Familiarity The answer starts with the brain. Humans have something called normalcy bias. It’s a mental reflex that says, “Stick with what you know. Change is risky.” It’s a survival mechanism, but in modern life, it often turns into a self-made prison. Think about it. People stay lo...