The $19999 Sinking Feeling: Why We Buy Solutions and Skip the Soil
Water is pooling in the deep tread of the forklift tires, a thick, oily black that reflects the charcoal sky like a broken mirror. I’m standing there, phone buzzing in my pocket with a return call I’m too terrified to answer because I just accidentally hung up on my boss mid-sentence. My thumb slipped. A simple, stupid mechanical error. It’s funny how a three-millimeter slip of a thumb can derail a professional relationship, much like how the $14999 steel box currently hovering in the air is about to be derailed by a few inches of uncompacted silt. The executives are huddled under a shared umbrella, their Italian leather shoes slowly disappearing into the mire. They paid for the asset. They signed the check for the ‘solution.’ But they refused to spend the $899 to bring in a vibratory roller and a few loads of crushed stone. Now, they are watching physics take its toll.
We are a culture addicted to the ‘unboxing’ but violently allergic to the ‘leveling.’ Whether it’s a high-end software suite, a new fitness regimen, or a 40-foot shipping container intended for onsite storage, we want the transformation without the transit. We want the result without the dirt. I see it in the way we treat our foundations-literal and metaphorical. We assume that if a product is expensive enough, it should be able to transcend the environment
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