“…All these features that come together to make up a particular social practice will have an influence on how people feel about themselves, how they give meaning to their experience, and ultimately on how they identify or include themselves within particular practices. For instance, Lamont-Robinson, Williams and Thompson (2018) have shown in a different context how objects may be significant in shaping people's decisions and actions within individual practices, which in turn are then 'continually shifting and re-developing' (Lamont-Robinson et al, 2018, p. 2). When someone enters an environment where things are done in ways that do not include their own needs or perspectives, then the material elements of that practice (in this case, maybe waiting rooms, complex written information, or medical equipment) combine with the human interactions in that environment, to create what is often a negative, disempowering and 'misfitting' experience.…”