I stopped believing in the forty-eight-hour window
The amateur marathon runner always believes the first are a prophetic vision of the remaining twenty-three.
They check their watch at the , they see a pace that suggests a record-breaking morning, they ignore the slight twinge in their left hamstring, and they proceed as if the physics of exhaustion simply do not apply to their specific biology.
We do this in construction and facilities management every single Tuesday. We sit in windowless conference rooms with lukewarm coffee, we look at Gantt charts that possess the aesthetic clean lines of a Mondrian painting, we listen to contractors promise that the system impairment will be a surgical strike, and we all collectively agree to pretend that the shutdown window is a fixed, immutable law of nature.
01
The Vertical Tomb Paradox
Last month, I spent stuck in an elevator. It was a small, brushed-metal box that smelled vaguely of industrial floor wax and the anxiety of the three people who had occupied it before me.
When the car lurched and stopped between floors, the first thing I did was check my phone, which had no service, and the second thing I did was press the alarm button, which emitted a sound that was less an emergency signal and
