Thematically, the book interrogates repair culture: how societies repair objects, systems, and, crucially, people. "Fixed" asks whether fixing always means restoring original function or if sometimes repair exposes deeper needs. Characters wrestle with responsibility—who is owed an honest fix, who gets a patch, and who is left with the ersatz comfort of a product marketed as whole. The device becomes a mirror for these questions, amplifying the human tendency to accept nominal fixes to avoid uncomfortable truths.