# The Quiet Weight of Incidents ## What We Carry An incident is never just a moment. It is the small fracture that reveals how the whole system was leaning all along. Like a floorboard that suddenly creaks underfoot, it does not create the weakness. It only makes the weakness audible. In that sense every incident is a kind of quiet teacher, arriving without ceremony to show us where we have been pretending things were stronger than they truly were. I have come to think of incidents the way a gardener thinks of broken branches after a storm. The break hurts the tree, yet it also tells the gardener exactly which limbs had grown too heavy or too brittle to carry their own future. The damage is real, but so is the information. ## The Space Between Between the moment something fails and the moment we understand why, there is a small clearing. In that clearing we are neither defending nor explaining. We are simply listening. The best teams I have known treated that space with care, almost reverence. They did not rush to close it with blame or clever fixes. They let the incident speak first. Most of the time the incident does not speak in dramatic language. It speaks in small, ordinary truths: a forgotten assumption, a tired habit, a kindness we meant to show the future but never quite got around to. ## Learning to Walk Softly We cannot eliminate incidents any more than we can eliminate weather. What we can do is become people who know how to walk more softly on the systems we build, who notice the early creaks instead of waiting for the crash. - We slow down when the data looks too perfect. - We ask what small thing we have stopped checking. - We remember that every workaround is a promise we made to tomorrow that we may not be able to keep. *Incidents do not punish us for being imperfect. They invite us to be honest.*