The — Unthinkable

Not to manifest it. To disarm it.

That’s the unthinkable. Not the impossible. Not the fantastical. But the deeply, terrifyingly possible scenario we refuse to prepare for. In 2012, most people in Hurricane Sandy’s path thought, “It won’t be that bad.” In 2020, even as ships anchored offshore, business leaders whispered, “Supply chains are resilient.” In 2023, as AI models improved at a startling rate, regulators said, “We’ll cross that bridge when we come to it.”

April 17, 2026

That’s not pessimism. That’s the most optimistic thing a person can do: believe they are strong enough to look at the dark, so they can build a light that actually lasts. What’s one “unthinkable” scenario you’ve been avoiding? Not to scare you—but to make you ready. Drop a thought below.

We have a strange relationship with the edge of our own imagination. The Unthinkable

Every major system failure—from the Titan submersible implosion to the Silicon Valley Bank run—shared a common thread. Someone, somewhere, had thought of the risk. But they were told it was “too unlikely to model,” or “too negative to discuss in a team meeting.”

And when it arrives, you don’t want to be standing there saying, “I never thought this could happen to me.” Not to manifest it

Because the unthinkable rarely announces itself with a drumroll. It arrives quietly, disguised as “just this once” or “it’ll probably be fine.”