# When Systems Break

## The First Silence

On July 13, 2026, the logs went quiet. Not crashed, not loud, just suddenly still. For three long minutes the usual chatter of alerts and heartbeats disappeared. Engineers stared at black terminals, waiting for the familiar noise to return. In that unexpected hush we remembered something basic: every incident begins with a story we failed to hear.

The system had been speaking all along, in small warnings we had learned to ignore. A slow memory leak, a slightly longer response time, an occasional timeout that always recovered. We called these things noise. Only when the noise stopped did we understand it had been the voice of the machine trying to tell us it was tired.

## Learning to Listen

Incidents are not failures of technology. They are failures of attention. We build complex worlds and then stop noticing the small daily changes inside them. A configuration drifts. A dependency ages. A human habit becomes a hidden assumption. None of these feel urgent until the day they line up perfectly and the silence arrives.

The best teams I have worked with treat every incident as a chance to restore a relationship, not just to restore service. They ask gentle questions. What were we too busy to see? What small signals did we train ourselves to tune out? The answers are rarely dramatic. They are usually ordinary and slightly embarrassing, which is why they matter.

- We fixed the symptom in eleven minutes.
- We understood the real story in eleven days.

## A Quieter Way

After the incident we added one simple practice. Once a week someone opens the logs and just listens, without looking for problems to solve. They note what feels different, what feels the same, what feels lonely. The practice sounds pointless until you realize the system has been trying to talk to us in its own patient language the whole time.

*Every breakdown is an invitation to begin listening again.*