I Stopped Mistaking the Signature for the Solution
The smell of a pressurized cabin at is a chemical sticktail of recycled air, coffee that tastes like scorched earth, and the faint, ozone-heavy scent of anti-static spray on polyester seat covers. It is the smell of transition. I was wedged into 4C, the tray table vibrating with a rhythmic, metallic anxiety that matched the engines. My fountain pen-a heavy, brass-bodied thing that feels like an anchor in my hand-was poised over page 14 of a document that had no business being forty-eight pages long.
I was initialing. It is a mindless, muscular act. A quick flick of the wrist, a small loop of ink that theoretically binds my soul to a global anti-bribery policy. I had scrolled past the definitions of “facilitation fees” and “government intermediaries” with the practiced indifference of a teenager agreeing to a software update.
Two seats ahead, a regional director was doing the exact same thing, his pen moving with the mechanical precision of a clockwork toy. We were both performing a ritual of administrative hygiene, clearing the decks so our onboarding could be marked “complete” by a server in a different time zone before the wheels left the tarmac.
The Phonetic Deception
I realized then that I had been mispronouncing “fiduciary” for nearly a decade. I’d been saying it as fid-yoo-shee-ary,
