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This chapter introduces prototyping methods – the heart of Life Design experimentation. Prototyping transforms ideas into tangible actions, allowing you to test life paths without pressure or perfectionism. Instead of waiting for certainty, you gain clarity by doing. The chapter presents ten playful, low-risk ways to explore possibilities: from desk research and volunteering to thirty-day challenges, role plays, and side projects. Two signature methods anchor the process: the Magic Circle, which helps surface bold dreams by aligning your values, energy, and longings; and the Stairway to Heaven, which breaks those dreams into actionable microsteps. Together, they offer a bridge from aspiration to implementation. Whether you’re curious about new directions or ready to reimagine your life, these methods help you act now – creatively, confidently, and joyfully.
In this chapter, we explore how the transfer of power between the monarch and the prime minister occurred, when it happened, how the monarchy survived, the importance it still has in Britain, and how far the prime minister has effectively become the head of state as well as head of executive. The monarchy continued to exercise real authority for the first 200 years of the prime minister’s existence and beyond, up to today. The rebalancing of power was painful, faltering, and contested. Scratch below the surface, and the relationship between head of state and head of government has been far from settled. The continued existence of an independent prime minister was not a given in the eighteenth century. The continued existence of the monarchy until today has not been a given either. It had been abolished in Britain in 1649, as it was in France in 1792 (and 1848 and 1870), Germany in 1918, and Italy in 1946. It would have been vulnerable in Britain had there been military defeat or successful revolution: its continuation into the future is not assured. Monarchies are going out of fashion. Britain’s has held strong.
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