In honor of us making it to another Friday, I pulled a Corporate Tarot card for our collective. One card. No incense. No dramatic whispering. Just me, a half-cold coffee, and the creeping awareness that weâve all been taking notes from the wrong screen.
đ THE CAVE (Corporate Edition)
Theme: The wall is playing a show. We keep mistaking it for a documentary.
Platoâs cave is the original âI saw it on TV, so it must be true.â
Only in 2026, the wall isnât flickering shadows. Itâs a perfectly edited episode:
-clear villains
-lovable heroes
-a conflict that resolves before the commercial break
-a lesson so tidy it could be laminated
And we absorb it the way humans absorb anything with a soundtrack: we start assuming our real lives should follow the same structure. So at work, we build our own âepisodesâ too:
-The deck tells a clean story where every project has a beginning, middle, and triumphant end.
-The status update implies the messy part was a short montage where everyone looked busy but calm.
-The dashboard becomes the narrator, even when itâs leaving out entire characters.
Then reality walks in wearing sweatpants and carrying three plotlines at once.
-A customer does something that doesnât match the persona.
-A process breaks in a place no one has a metric for.
-A âsimple changeâ turns out to be twelve dependencies in a trench coat.
And when someone brings that real-life mess into the room, the reaction is rarely, âThank you for the truth.â
Itâs more like:
âThatâs not the story weâre telling.â
âCan we tighten this up?â
âLetâs stay positive.â
TRANSLATION: Please donât interrupt the episode.
The personal version (because of course itâs personal)… we do this to ourselves, too. We watch stories where the main character has a crisp turning point: one brave conversation, one bold decision, one meaningful stare out a window⌠and then theyâre healed. Meanwhile, in real life, growth looks like:
-circling the same lesson three more times because youâre human
-doing the right thing and still feeling weird about it
-wanting change and mourning the old safety at the same time
Even when a new truth is tapping on the glass like, âHey. Iâm not here to ruin you. Iâm here to free you.â
So, when the story feels a little too neat, ask this: âWhatâs happening off-screen that our âepisodeâ isnât showing?â
At work, that question finds the missing constraints, the unmeasured work, the quiet risks, the human cost.
In life, it finds the real motive, the real fear, the real hope youâve been editing out for the sake of a cleaner narrative.
Because the cave wall will always offer you a plot, but reality offers you practice.
So, where are you seeing âepisode thinkingâ right now, at work or in life and whatâs the off-screen piece you suspect is being edited out?

