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Law 11: Learn to Keep People Dependent on You
To maintain power and independence, you must ensure that others need you more than you need them.
Your value lies in being indispensable - whether through unique skills, access to resources, or irreplaceable connections.
The moment someone can easily replace or do without you, your influence weakens dramatically.
Freedom and security come not from isolating yourself, but from becoming the essential link in other people's success.
This dependency should be subtle and strategic, never overt or oppressive.
You cultivate it by solving problems others cannot, providing something rare, or positioning yourself as the only one who can navigate certain dangers.
The goal is to make your absence felt immediately and painfully, without ever appearing to blackmail or threaten.
Historical examples include Otto von Bismarck, who made himself indispensable to the Prussian king, by mastering court politics and foreign affairs in ways no one else could.
In modern terms, think of the employee who knows the company's chaotic systems better than anyone.
Or the advisor whom a powerful person trusts completely with their secrets and image.
Power belongs to those who are needed, not merely respected or feared.

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