Meet Your Internal Drivers

Meet Your Internal Drivers

Who
we are

We are a community of readers and builders exploring the hidden forces that shape modern life—systems we inherit, repeat, and rarely question.
Our mission is to help people see the invisible wheels—fear, desire, power, money, and stories—so they can choose more consciously.
Our vision is a future where those wheels are redesigned with human dignity at the center, not obsession, extraction, or control.
Through weekly notes, honest conversations, and practical reflection, we turn insight into action—one small shift at a time.
Over time, these shifts compound into better systems for the generations that follow.

What People Are Saying


David M., Seattle, WA (1/7/2026): I picked up *Crushing Wheels* not for motivation, but because I was fed up with doing everything right yet still feeling behind. The book revealed how fear and desire perpetuate a cycle of work, identity, money, and status, making it hard to tell if I was living a life or just feeding a machine. I realized that I wasn’t being forced to keep up; I was choosing to because I thought rest needed to be earned. While I didn’t make drastic changes overnight, I started pausing before proving myself and recognizing the cycles I was part of. The result wasn’t a bigger life, but a quieter, more authentic one. If you've felt successful on paper yet trapped in your routine, this book offers a revealing glimpse of the truth.

Mina R., Vancouver, BC (1/31/2026): I didn’t read Crushing Wheels like a self-help book—I read it like a mirror. It named the quiet pressures I couldn’t explain: the need to stay productive, to look like I’m progressing, to buy small comforts just to survive the week. What hit me hardest was the idea that the “system” isn’t only outside us—it lives inside our habits, our status anxiety, and our fear of slowing down. After finishing the book, I started noticing the moment I reach for distraction—scrolling, spending, overworking—and asking what I’m actually trying to avoid. That single pause has changed my days. The book didn’t give me a new identity; it helped me drop the ones I was performing.