This article was automatically translated from the original Turkish version.
The air inside is exchanged with the air outside. The air within the home continues to change until it becomes identical to the air outside. The rate of this exchange is determined by the difference in air density between inside and outside, as well as the amount of air entering and exiting through open windows and doors that facilitate airflow.
The same principle applies to individuals. Changes occur according to a person’s position and the position of their environment. When a person’s position is insufficiently protected from the environment, they begin to take on the environment’s form. Conversely, when the environment is insufficiently protected from the person, it begins to take on the person’s shape. This transformation may sometimes be imperceptible physically, but change always occurs, just as it does in the transfer of air.
What influences change in the second part? In summary, everything influences it. Some factors have less impact, others more—but everything has an effect. A person’s own thoughts are the most powerful influence, until the thoughts of others are strong enough to alter them.
At the same time, the environment itself and the details within it—though to a lesser degree—certainly exert influence. For example, colors, texts, images, and other elements in the environment are factors that are often overlooked yet still impactful.

A Visual Representing Interaction (Generated by Artificial Intelligence)
The rejection of change and transformation sometimes stems from their occurrence being so slow as to go unnoticed. At other times, it is because the very thoughts that are changing are themselves resisted.
Therefore, the universe must be observed and it must be stated that there is nothing in the world that does not change. If change is inevitable, then the cause of change is also inevitable. The agent responsible for this change is sometimes outside the person and sometimes within. Moreover, the interior is already shaped by external influences.
The internal and external conditions that influence a person’s thoughts are unchanging causes of change. Just as a person’s health issues can affect their external circumstances, so too can external circumstances affect their internal state. Clothing, smile, and a few other factors are merely examples of these unchanging causes of change.