# The Pause Between ## When Systems Break An incident is never just an error. It is a moment when something we counted on suddenly falls silent. In that silence we are forced to look more carefully at what we built and how we depend on it. The domain name *incident.md* reminds me that these moments deserve their own quiet record, not as trophies of failure but as gentle teachers. On July 16, 2026, I sat with a small team after a production outage that lasted forty-three minutes. No one raised their voice. We simply opened a fresh page and began writing what we had seen, felt, and learned. The act of writing it down changed the temperature in the room. Panic gave way to thoughtfulness. Blame dissolved into shared curiosity. ## The Space Between Cause and Story Every incident holds a gap. Between the moment the system broke and the moment we tell its story sits a small, honest space. In that space we decide whether we will rush to assign fault or whether we will stay long enough to understand. The best incident write-ups I have read feel more like letters than reports. They speak in plain sentences. They admit confusion. They notice small details: the way a particular log line looked different, the way someone’s voice grew quieter on the call, the way the coffee went cold while we waited for a service to restart. *incident.md* becomes a place to keep those honest letters. It turns the raw surprise of breakage into something steadier: a memory we can return to without shame. ## Learning to Listen We do not improve because we eliminate every future incident. We improve because we learn to listen more carefully when they arrive. The file extension itself suggests this: .md for markdown, for plain text, for human words. No elaborate diagrams. Just the clear record of what happened and what it meant to us. The incident, then, is not the enemy. It is the messenger that arrives when our assumptions have quietly drifted too far from reality. If we meet it with calm attention, it always leaves something useful behind. *Even breakage can be a form of care.*