# The Quiet Weight of Incidents ## What We Choose to Remember An incident is more than a mistake or a failure. It is a moment when something hidden becomes visible. On July 14, 2026, I sat with a notebook and thought about how every system, every team, every life eventually meets an incident. These moments reveal what we actually value, not what we claim to value. The word itself carries a gentle honesty. It does not scream catastrophe. It simply says: something happened here that we did not expect. In that space between expectation and reality, we learn who we are. ## The Space Between Incidents ask us to slow down. They invite us to look carefully at the small decisions that came before the larger one. Often the real cause is not a dramatic error but a thousand quiet assumptions we stopped questioning months earlier. We rarely celebrate the people who prevent incidents. Their work is invisible by design. Yet when things go wrong, we suddenly see the shape of all the care that had been holding everything together. The incident becomes a kind of mirror, showing both our strengths and the places where our attention had drifted. ## A Gentle Practice Good incident practice feels more like gardening than engineering. You tend to the soil. You notice small changes. You remove what no longer serves. You accept that perfect safety is impossible, but thoughtful attention is always possible. Some of the best teams I have known treated incidents like quiet teachers rather than enemies. They listened without defensiveness. They asked better questions. Over time, their systems did not become perfect, but they became more honest. *Even the smallest incident carries a soft reminder: attention is love.*