Surface Tension #5 - When the response become the damage


Welcome to The Surface Tension Newsletter!

Where Ideas Meet and Mate.

Surface Tension is a weekly exploration of ideas and insights from the books and articles I read, along with thought-provoking quotes.

The Story phase

Candice Millard writes in her book Destiny of the Republic:

“Although there were many deaths in the late nineteenth century that even the most skilled physicians could not prevent, Garfield’s was not one of them. In fact, following his autopsy, it became immediately and painfully apparent that, far from preventing or even delaying the president’s death, his doctors very likely caused it.”

So..the bullet is the headline, but the treatment is what made all the mess.

In stressful moments, we love clean causes. A single villain. A single event. Something you can point to and say, “ That’s what did it. But Garfield’s story is brutal in a really subtle way. The thing that arrived first was survivable. The thing that followed was what led to chaos.

And the most unsettling part is that the doctors were not trying to harm him at all. They were just…responding. They were doing what the moment demanded in public. They were acting inside a system that equated action with competence.

So here is the problem I keep coming back to.

When something hits you fast, how do you tell whether the danger is the event itself or the reaction you are about to set in motion?

The Structure phase

Under pressure, decisions stop being neutral. They become performances. Not because people are evil, but because stress changes what “good” looks like in the room.

A simple model:

  • The shock creates a stage. A crisis makes everyone watch. The system starts rewarding speed, certainty, and visible movement.
  • The response multiplies touchpoints. More people, more meetings, more hands on the problem. Each hand adds risk, even when intentions are good.
  • The second-order effects do the real work. The original event is one input. The response creates the cascade. Then the cascade becomes the outcome.

A small change in how we react to an event can produce a huge change in what actually happens next.

The interface

Garfield’s doctors are escalating intervention ≈ in a stressed system, escalating response.

The implication is not that action is bad or that help is dangerous. It is that outcomes often belong to the reaction chain more than the original trigger, especially when reputation, hierarchy, and time pressure start steering the room.

Interface question: When a problem hits at work or in a relationship, what part of your response is for the problem, and what part is for the audience that you think is watching you?


​Click here to read this in your browser.

Thanks for reading! If you liked it, share it with your friends.

600 1st Ave, Ste 330 PMB 92768, Seattle, WA 98104-2246
​Unsubscribe · Preferences​

Aruna Kumarasiri

Turning pages into ideas 💡📚 | Book reviews, reflections, and insights from science, history & culture

Read more from Aruna Kumarasiri

Welcome to The Surface Tension Newsletter! Where Ideas Meet and Mate. Surface Tension is a weekly exploration of ideas and insights from the books and articles I read, along with thought-provoking quotes. The Story phase “I know it’s full of evils, full of human injustice, greed, folly, waste. But it is also full of good, of beauty, vitality, achievement. It is what a world should be! It is alive, tremendously alive—alive, despite all its evils, with hope. Is that not true?” (Page 389) When I...

Surface Tension Newsletter, where ideas meet and mate

Welcome to The Surface Tension Newsletter! Welcome to the January issue of Surface Tension Newsletter. Every month I publish 8 pieces, and in this newsletter I highlight the two I think are most worth your time: one article and one book note. If you want the full list, feel free read all of them on the blog. The other 6 posts are also linked at the end of each section. Article of the Month: How Many Books Should You Read at Once? A Mood-Based System for Reading 50+ Books a Year For the past...

Welcome to The Surface Tension Newsletter! Welcome to the December issue of Surface Tension Newsletter. This month, out of all 8 posts I wrote, I wrote two of my most awaited articles that I’ve been thinking about since August. One about how to use the book ‘48 Laws of Power’ in the most ethical way possible, and the other was the 30 lessons from 30 years post. Below are some of the key lessons and highlights of those 2 posts. Other posts are also mentioned at the end of each section. 1. Book...