# Incidents

## The Nature of Records

Every incident leaves a trace. Not because we chase perfection, but because memory is fragile and consequences matter. When we write down what went wrong, we are doing something quiet and decent: we are refusing to let the moment disappear without teaching us. The file becomes a gentle ledger of care.

In the calm after an event, the act of documentation feels almost sacred. No drama, no blame, just the honest shape of what happened. A server failed at 3 a.m. A colleague made a poor decision under pressure. A process that worked for years suddenly didn't. Each one is small on its own, yet each one changes how we see the world that follows.

## What the Record Remembers

The best incident write-ups do not focus on fault. They focus on sequence and feeling. What did it feel like when the alerts began? What assumptions guided our first response? Where did our understanding shift? These questions turn technical events into human ones.

We record incidents because tomorrow's version of ourselves will be different, slightly wiser, and will need the map we left behind. The file is not a scar. It is a note passed forward in time, saying: *this is how we learned.*

- We learn that most failures are ordinary
- We learn that kindness in review produces better truth
- We learn that systems include people

## A Quiet Practice

There is humility in keeping an incidents file. It admits that we are not infallible. It also admits that we are paying attention. In a world that moves quickly and forgets easily, the willingness to pause, reflect, and write with care is an act of quiet integrity.

*Even the smallest incident, carefully understood, becomes a form of gratitude.*