# Incidents in Plain Text

## The Sudden Turn

Life moves in straight lines until it doesn't. An incident—a spilled coffee, a chance meeting, a quiet realization—pulls us off course. On this day in 2026, as rain taps the window, I think of one: a walk interrupted by a fallen branch. No harm, just a pause. These moments aren't chaos; they're punctuation in our story, forcing us to notice what we otherwise rush past.

## Marking It Down

We reach for paper or a screen, jotting notes in simple words. Markdown fits perfectly here—plain text that shapes into meaning without fuss. No bold claims or flashy edits, just honest lines:

- What happened
- How it felt
- What lingers

This act turns raw event into reflection. The branch wasn't just wood; it was a reminder of fragility, of paths rerouted. By writing it plainly, we hold the incident gently, letting it teach without overwhelming.

## The Quiet Philosophy

Incidents stack like pages in a journal, revealing patterns over time. They whisper that control is an illusion, but attention is a choice. In documenting them simply, we weave resilience—not by avoiding the turns, but by walking through them mindfully. What seemed disruptive becomes a marker, guiding the next step.

*Every incident, once marked down, becomes a companion on the way.*