# When Incidents Become Teachers ## The First Quiet Realization On a warm July evening in 2026 I sat with a notebook after yet another production incident. The system had failed quietly at first, the way most important things do. No alarms, just a slow drift until someone noticed. As I wrote down what happened I began to see the incident not as a failure but as a patient teacher. It had waited until we were ready to listen. Incidents carry messages we often ignore in the rush to restore service. They speak in the language of overlooked details and small compromises we made months earlier. The more I paid attention the more I understood that every incident is a mirror. It shows us exactly where we stopped being careful with what matters. ## The Space Between There is a gentle space that opens after an incident is resolved but before we declare it closed. In that space we can choose to learn or simply move on. I have come to value that pause the way a gardener values the quiet time between seasons. Nothing dramatic happens there. Just honest reflection and the slow work of understanding. We rarely get to prevent every future problem. What we can do is become slightly wiser, slightly more attentive. The incident becomes less about blame and more about relationship, our relationship with the systems we build and the care we bring to them. - We learn more from the incidents we treat with respect than from those we rush past. - The best teams I have worked with treat post-incident time as sacred, not administrative. ## A Simpler Way Forward The name incidents.md reminds me that these moments deserve their own quiet documentation, their own place to be remembered without drama. They are not enemies to defeat but fellow travelers showing us where we need to grow. *Some breaks in the pattern are the pattern itself.*