Finding truth in the world today is hard.
We all inherit stories about what the world is.
From parents. Teachers. Religion. Politics. Music. Media. The systems around us hand us frameworks for reality long before we ever choose them for ourselves.
Over time, those stories harden into walls.
And each of us builds different walls.
Different truths about power. About morality. About identity. About what kind of world we live in and what role we are meant to play inside it.
So whose truth is right? Who gets to decide?
When someone else tries to answer that for us, we resist. Not only because we disagree, but because underneath disagreement is fear. If the structure breaks apart, what remains of us without it?
This is where fiction matters.
Stories let us move into difficult territory without triggering the same defenses reality does. Fiction makes it possible to question systems, beliefs, governments, cultures, and even our own identities without the ground caving in beneath us.
A story can ask: Is this helping or harming? Who benefits? What happens to people inside this structure? Could there be another way?
And no one has to tell us what to think.
We get to decide how far we are willing to push against the wall.
That is why stories matter to me.
Not as escape. As truth detection.
Fiction is resistance against apathy. Against control. Against the quiet pressure to accept the world exactly as it is.
It gives shape to the feeling many people carry: the low hum of a lie not yet located.
A good story does not only explore pain, anger, or corruption. It explores alternatives. Possibilities. The tension between what is and what could be.
That is why Ambassador exists.
Ambassador is about systems of power and the psychology used to maintain them. It explores how people become so invested in the roles they perform that they no longer recognize the fractures inside the structures they defend.
It asks what happens when a system becomes larger than the people inside it.
When institutions develop their own momentum. Their own survival instinct.
It questions leadership. Control. Fear. Division.
And beneath all of it is a deeper question:
How do we search for truth in a universe where no one fully possesses it?
Ambassador is the rebellion of my heart against power and control in the search for another way.