Why Do Things Happen Slowly and Then All at Once?
Why Do Things Happen Slowly and Then All at Once? Tipping Point The hidden architecture of tipping points Some changes do not move in a straight line. They gather pressure quietly, then cross a threshold where the old pattern can no longer hold. A tipping point is the moment when accumulated change triggers a self-reinforcing shift, making the result appear sudden even though the causes have been building for a long time. This matters because people often miss change while it is still cheap to influence. Then, once the shift becomes visible, they mistake the final trigger for the whole cause. Why This Question Matters Things happen slowly and then all at once because systems often absorb pressure before they visibly change. A friendship can tolerate small disappointments for years, until one ordinary comment ends it. A company can ignore technical debt for years, until one launch collapses under its own fragility. A social movement can look marginal, then suddenly become mainstream. T...