# Incidents

## The Nature of Small Crashes

Every incident begins with something ordinary. A forgotten password, a mistyped command, a server that quietly stops responding. These moments feel small until they are not. In the quiet hours after the alert, we sit with what went wrong and why it mattered. The name incidents reminds us that these events are not interruptions to our work. They are the work itself, the places where systems and humans meet most honestly.

## What We Learn When Things Break

When something fails, we stop guessing and start seeing. We notice the assumptions we made months ago. We hear the small worries our colleagues tried to voice in meetings. An incident pulls hidden truths into the light. It shows us where our processes were more fragile than we admitted, and where our team was stronger than we realized. The best teams do not rush to close the ticket. They stay with the discomfort long enough to understand it.

- We learn more from one honest postmortem than from a hundred flawless days.
- The people who speak up during an incident often become the ones who prevent the next one.
- Every resolved incident carries a quiet promise: we will not let this same pain happen to someone else.

## The Gentle Rhythm of Repair

Incidents teach us patience with complexity. Systems grow beyond what any single person can hold in their mind. When they break, we are reminded of our limits and of our shared responsibility. The repair is never only technical. It is also relational, rebuilding trust between people and the tools they depend on.

*In the end, every incident is an invitation to pay better attention.*