So, the next time you walk across a bridge, post a controversial opinion, or hit "buy" on a leveraged ETF, pause for a moment. Look at the thing you value. Ask yourself: What would it take for this to be gone? Not in a year. Not in a month. In the time it takes to exhale?
We tell ourselves stories of permanence to fall asleep at night. But the honest reality is that the difference between stability and rubble is often not a plan, not a warning, not a prayer—it is a single second where a load exceeds a threshold, a voltage exceeds a dielectric breakdown, or a rumor exceeds a reputation’s defense. destroyed in seconds
We live under the comforting illusion that the world around us is permanent. The house we slept in last night, the bridge we crossed this morning, the portfolio we built over twenty years, and even the reputation we curated for a lifetime—we assume they have a baseline of durability measured in decades. But history, physics, and finance have a brutal counter-argument: the most solid structures, both physical and metaphorical, can be destroyed in seconds . So, the next time you walk across a