You are sitting on your sofa, the one with the frayed left armrest where the fabric has finally given up the ghost after seven years of supporting your leaning weight. It is .
Outside, the streetlights in Chișinău are humming with that low-frequency buzz that most people ignore but that safety inspectors like me find vaguely threatening. You have fourteen tabs open on your browser. One is a review of a processor you don’t quite understand, three are price comparisons, and the rest are distractions you’ve accumulated like digital lint.
Your thumb is hovering-not twitching, but poised-over a button that promises to solve your current technological inadequacy with a single, frictionless click.
The Necessity of Resistance
Twelve millimeters of rubberized safety mulch is all that separates a falling toddler from a traumatic brain injury on the playgrounds I inspect. I spend my days measuring the torque of galvanized bolts and the elasticity of impact-attenuating surfaces.
My world is one of necessary resistance. If a slide is too fast and the run-out is too short, the child becomes a projectile. If a swing’s chain has too much slack, it becomes a garrote.
But here, on your couch, you are being told that friction is the
