Q&A 080 — Why does complacency show up right when things are going well?

Things were going smoothly.
I wasn’t struggling.
I felt confident.

And that’s when I slipped.

People say it was complacency.
But it didn’t feel like arrogance.

Why does this happen
exactly when things seem under control?

Ossan’s answer:

Because control has a cost.

When you first learn something,
attention is expensive but precise.

As you get better,
attention becomes cheaper.

That’s not a failure.
That’s efficiency.

The problem isn’t that attention drops.
It’s that nothing tells you where the floor is.

So you keep lowering effort
until something breaks.

Calling that “oil断”
sounds like a moral issue.

It’s not.

It’s a calibration problem.

And noticing that difference
changes how you recover.

Q&A 080 — Why does complacency show up right when things are going well? (Members)

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