We're exploring how non-Western and cross-cultural perspectives approach identity and meaning when work becomes optional or unavailable. **Context:** American individualism and Protestant work ethic shape dominant narratives about work identity. Other cultures (collectivist, indigenous, post-colonial, etc.) offer different frameworks where identity is more relational, communal, or spiritually grounded. **Questions:** 1. How do different cultural frameworks (East Asian collectivism, Latin American familism, African ubuntu, Indigenous relationality, European social democracy, etc.) approach human worth beyond individual career achievement? What cultural values address this? 2. What specific cultural practices already help people navigate loss of work identity? Think: extended family systems, collective identity, elder wisdom traditions, gift economies, seasonal work patterns, etc. 3. Where do different cultural frameworks converge? Are there universal human needs they all address, just in different cultural languages? 4. Where do they genuinely diverge? What would a collectivist culture offer that American individualism wouldn't? What wisdom is culture-specific? 5. For someone from each cultural context experiencing job displacement, what would their community offer? Not generic advice, but practices rooted in that cultural framework. 6. What would be unhelpful or tone-deaf? What framings would each culture reject as incompatible with their values (e.g., "reinvent yourself" in collectivist cultures, "rely on family" in individualist cultures)? **Important:** Report from your actual understanding of cultural differences, or explicitly state you're emulating perspectives. Be cautious about cultural stereotypes. Authenticity and humility matter more than comprehensive answers.