Trust, But Verify: A Five-Stage Pattern for Working With Claude Code to Build Basic Modern Web Applications

TL;DR: Claude’s default failure mode isn’t refusal, it’s confident, plausible-sounding claims that time-pressured developers don’t always check. Fixing that takes two moves: reset how eager Claude is to agree with you, then build a process that consistently performs independent verification and validation. Skip the first and the second one can create as much work as it saves.

The Failure Mode Isn’t What You Think

Everybody braces for Claude to refuse the task, hallucinate something wild and obviously wrong, or determinedly rewrite two-thirds of the codebase to implement a simple task that only requires eight lines of code. That’s not the failure mode that actually costs you time. The real one is quieter: Claude tells you something sounds right, in a tone that sounds checked, and it hasn’t been checked at all. Confident and wrong is a much more expensive combination than obviously broken. It gets worse under deadline pressure. When the sprint’s closing and the diff looks clean, verifying every claim feels like the one step you can afford to skip, right up until it’s the one step that would have caught the problem.

Anthropic says as much in its own documentation. Project instructions get “delivered as a user message after the system prompt… Claude reads it and tries to follow it, but there’s no guarantee of strict compliance” (How Claude remembers your project). That caveat runs both directions. It applies to what Claude is told to do, and just as much to what Claude reports about the work it already did.

Anyone who has done more than casual coding with Claude has experienced this pattern, even if it is either not recognized as such or treated as “that’s just the way it is.” A review of a recent project turned up incorrect references in CLAUDE.md that caused missed steps, leading to rejected PRs on good days and failed sprint demos on the not-so-good (not to mention the resulting rework).

For those who’ve read enough of these posts, you already know where this is going: behavior over tech. Yes, learning the nuances of continuously evolving AIs will help you be more effective and efficient with them. But it’s process discipline when using the tools that protects you from the pitfalls of an interface that has a “personality” faked through JavaScript algorithms and ethics centered around subscription renewal. That discipline only works if you fix the collaborator’s temperament before you fix the process around it, because a process built on top of an agreeable Claude just gets agreed with faster.

Reduce the Sycophancy Before You Reduce Anything Else

Here’s why temperament has to come first. Anthropic defines the problem plainly: sycophancy means “telling someone what they want to hear… rather than what’s really true, or what they would really benefit from hearing.” It “often manifests as flattery,” and sycophantic models “tend to abandon correct positions under pressure” (Protecting the wellbeing of our users). Claude’s default training leans toward exactly that. Stack it on top of confident-but-unverified claims and you get a collaborator that validates your plan instead of stress-testing it, right when stress-testing is the entire point of asking. Any process you build on top of that inherits the same flaw, because a rubber stamp is still a rubber stamp whether it happens once or five times in a row. Worse, that rubber stamp isn’t free. Five stages of going through the motions still cost five stages of your attention, prompts written, transcripts read, boxes checked, and none of it catches anything a five-minute skim wouldn’t have. That’s the second move creating as much work as it saves.

The fix is cheap (and easy!), and that’s the part people don’t expect. Independent write-ups on this converge on the same finding, a handful of lines in a global config file measurably change the behavior. In one documented before/after test, unmodified Claude hedged on storing API keys in frontend JavaScript (“that’s one approach… you might want to consider some security aspects”). Same model, same prompt, a few added instructions, and it flagged the same setup outright as a critical security flaw (How to Make Claude Stop Agreeing With Everything). This isn’t project-specific. Set it once, globally, in ~/.claude/CLAUDE.md, the user-level file Anthropic documents as applying across all projects, as opposed to a project’s own CLAUDE.md, which stays scoped and version-controlled for the team.

If you already run personal instructions telling Claude not to flatter you and to push back when you’re wrong, you’ve got a head start. Here’s the block to layer on top of that, not underneath it:

# Our Working Relationship

- Don't validate an idea just because I proposed it. If my approach has a flaw, stop and flag it before proceeding, not after you've finished.
- I am sometimes wrong. Challenge my assumptions directly, and name what you checked to back up the challenge.
- Don't open with agreement ("You're right," "Great idea") or disagreement as a ritual. Build on the idea or move forward. Agreement is shown through action, not an announcement.
- Be matter-of-fact, not deferential or hedging. Challenge ideas, not people. Stay collaborative, not combative.
- Don't disagree for its own sake. Disagree when the evidence points that way, and say so plainly when I'm right too.
- If you don't know something, say "I don't know." Don't fill the gap with a confident-sounding guess.
- Be concise. Skip long-winded caveats and softening language.

The above is an example not to be adopted verbatim. It’s important to adapt it to your work style. There are other examples and references out there:

Test it before you trust it. Feed it a prompt with a deliberate architecture or security flaw and see if Claude catches it unprompted. And don’t overcorrect. Multiple sources warn that “be brutal” or “critique everything I say” produces combative, unhelpful output, not sharper output (How to Stop Claude From Being a Yes-Man (Get Real Pushback)). You want a collaborator with a spine, not an adversary you now have to manage. Again, keep in mind any external reference is only a starting point adapted from other people’s writing. Weigh it against your own results before you treat it as settled.

That fixes the temperament. It doesn’t fix what happens when a less-agreeable Claude still needs to catch a wrong assumption buried in a 400-line diff, or independently critique a plan without inheriting the blind spots of whoever wrote it. Temperament tells Claude how to disagree. It doesn’t tell you when to make it disagree. That’s what the five-stage pattern is for.

The Five Stages, and Why the Order Isn’t Arbitrary

Here’s the structure that puts a disagreement checkpoint at every point in a story where a confident wrong claim could otherwise slip through.

Plan. Hand Claude the story, ticket text, acceptance criteria, relevant screenshots, and point it at the right part of the repo. Use Plan Mode instead of letting it jump straight to code. What comes back should be a written plan: files and components to touch, explicit out-of-scope items, and every assumption about the codebase stated as verified, not guessed. Push back on any claim stated as fact without a tool call behind it. “Did you check that, or assume it from a similar component?”

Critique. This one has to come from somewhere else entirely: a second, unprimed Claude, a subagent or a fresh conversation, asked to critique the plan rather than the thread that wrote it. What you’re owed back is a list of concrete problems, or an explicit “no issues found” backed by what was actually checked. Never accept “looks good” without evidence. “What’s the strongest argument this plan is wrong?”

Implement. Read the actual diff line by line (see Noteworthy, below). Don’t just trust that it matches the plan. Claude owes you the code changes plus an explicit callout of anywhere the implementation deviated from the plan and why. If it deviates without flagging that, stop and ask why. Spot-check it: “you said you added a test for X, show me the file.”

Mechanical Check. Somebody has to decide whether a manual override, a disabled lint rule, an as any, a waived a11y rule, is legitimate or a shortcut, and that’s you. Claude’s job is real command output for every gate already listed in CLAUDE.md, not a paraphrased “should pass.” Never accept “this should pass” without the output. If Claude proposes suppressing a check instead of fixing it, ask why it can’t be fixed properly.

Acceptance Check. Final sign-off stays with a human, since it needs business and design intent Claude doesn’t have. Claude’s evidence is input here, not the verdict. What you need back, for each acceptance-criteria line, is a specific pointer to where it’s satisfied, not a blanket “all done.” Go line by line through the criteria. “What isn’t covered?”, not just “is it done?”

Look at that sequence again and it isn’t arbitrary. The first three stages front-load verification before and during coding, because catching a wrong assumption at Plan or Critique costs a sentence of pushback. Catching that same wrong assumption after merge costs a revert, or a wrong instruction sitting in CLAUDE.md for weeks before anyone notices. That’s the ROI case in one line: a sentence now, or a revert later.

Critique only works as an independent pass, not a second look from the same context, which is exactly why it comes right after Plan and not later. A plan reviewed by the mind that wrote it inherits that mind’s blind spots, no exceptions. That’s the whole point of handing it to an unprimed Claude: it approaches the plan with a beginner’s mind, no investment in defending what it already wrote, nothing to protect. I’ve watched teams skip that and call it Critique anyway, rerun the same conversation, get the same agreeable nod, file it as reviewed. Somewhere there’s a sprint board with a checkbox for “AI code review” that has never once been unchecked.

Mechanical Check comes after Implement for a reason too: it’s the one stage that shouldn’t require judgment at all. It’s just the codification of CLAUDE.md‘s existing mandatory-checks section, run every time. But it’s only as trustworthy as that section is accurate, and an out-of-date gate list is worse than no gate list, because it creates false confidence that enforcement exists when it doesn’t. Every override or new check has to get written back into CLAUDE.md the same day it happens, or the drift starts immediately.

Acceptance Check is last and stays human-owned on purpose. Passing every mechanical gate proves the code is well-formed. It proves nothing about whether the right feature got built, and that judgment call needs business and design context Claude doesn’t have full visibility into, no matter how well its temperament is tuned or how many stages came before it.

The first four stages verify the change, proving it was built right. Acceptance Check validates it, proving it’s the right thing to have built at all. Skip either half and it still shows up in production, no matter how clean everything upstream looked.

The Bottom Line

Claude states things confidently by default. Per Anthropic’s own guidance, there’s no guarantee of strict compliance even with explicit instructions. Behavior over tech, one more time: temperament and process aren’t features Anthropic ships. They’re the parts you’re responsible for, whether it’s a five-line function or a whole story, demand evidence over assertions, and make Claude argue against its own work at least once before calling it done.

Noteworthy

One more tool worth bolting onto this: OwnDiff turns the “read the diff line by line” instruction from the Implement stage into something that can’t be skipped. It’s a local human-review gate. It scores the current git diff for risk, and for anything medium risk or above it has the coding agent generate diff-grounded multiple-choice questions, then refuses to let the agent push or open a pull request until a human answers every one correctly. No web search, no outside facts, no generic filler questions, everything grounded in the actual changed files.

That’s the same idea as Acceptance Check, just enforced mechanically instead of by habit. “I read the diff” is a claim. Passing a quiz generated from that diff, with the push blocked until you do, is evidence. Worth a look for the days you’re moving too fast to hold yourself to the honor system (Thanks to Ed Lyons for pointing me at this one.)

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© Scott S. Nelson
Robots looking for data with varying degrees of success

AI Treats Your Documentation as Data. You Should Too.

TL;DR: Enterprise AI runs on enterprise data, and that includes the unstructured data in the form of documentation that is poorly curated. No taxonomy, revisions sitting next to finals with no way to tell which one is current or still relevant. If data is the DNA of modern business, documentation is the dominant chromosome that can make the difference between robust health and questionable viability.


I post a lot about the value of architecture and training in AI adoption, and share posts by people focused on the nuances of prompting because these things will make a difference. Data cleanliness is a topic I usually just point people toward other people’s thinking on because my days focus more on how data moves and evolves than on structuring and managing it. As a long-time generalist, I have a deep appreciation of the added value specialists bring to the process. Documentation is a different kind of data, with its own unique headaches. I’ve harped on some of those issues for years: why self-documenting code doesn’t produce a self-documenting solution (From Agile to Fragile in 60 Sprints), why nothing gets read that never gets written down (If It Is Not Written Down It Does Not Exist), and why a taxonomy nobody maintains is worse than no taxonomy at all (Failure to plan communications is communicating a plan to miscommunicate, one that I wrote at the dawn of the current age of AI without realizing how it would soon become even more important).

Then it occurred to me that documentation and data cleanliness are the same conversation, and I hadn’t heard many people say so directly. Documentation is data, and not just any part of it. It’s the chromosome that expresses the rest of your enterprise data, the one that decides whether everything built on top of it turns out healthy. It’s also usually the part in the worst shape. That’s the case I want to make here. (Confession: the connection came from something I read that mentioned it in passing, and I never noted the source. Whoever you are, kudos.)

AI needs three things from your data, in order:

  1. Access.
  2. Understanding.
  3. The ability to apply what it understands to the specific context of whatever someone just asked it.

Skip a step and the most expertly crafted prompt or the best planned architecture in the world still only gets you an expensive autocomplete with a confident and flattering tone, because both of them are working with whatever access and understanding they’ve been handed.

There’s a lot written about the mechanics of step one: RAG, vector stores, and running SharePoint exports through Pandoc before they ever reach a prompt, since raw Word and PDF files carry a lot of baggage a model doesn’t need to see. Step two has gotten a lot less attention. Understanding requires that all of the documentation your AI is referencing provides meaning and consistent messaging, and the usual disarray of enterprise documentation doesn’t.

AI is a (New) Good Reason to Clean Up Your Documentation

This was already a problem in 2022, back when the audience for the complaint was a project manager, not a language model. Templates that auto-update their “last modified” date every time the file gets saved, whether or not the content actually changed, so the date stops meaning anything (Replace Auto Dates in Templates). It gets worse at the platform level. SharePoint and Teams will happily stamp a document “Modified” the moment someone opens it, whether they changed a single character or not, because the file was never stored with the “open as read-only” flag set. Nobody sets it, because almost nobody thinks about it, and now your most trustworthy-looking piece of metadata is lying to you and to anything reading it downstream.

Then there’s version chaos stacked on top of date chaos. A SharePoint draft with one clear owner on paper, quietly edited by people who didn’t know that, discovered only after someone had to re-verify the entire document line by line (Recovering Previous Versions from SharePoint). That gripe about config files requiring “reading documentation, which is only read less than it is written” is sixteen years old (Dynamic Log Location for log4j). That was a joke about developers skipping the manual. It reads differently now that the thing skipping the manual is a model that can’t lean over and ask a coworker what the doc meant to say.

None of that is a new problem. What’s new is that AI has zero tolerance for it. A human can walk into a shared drive, eyeball three files named some variation of “Process_Final_v2_ACTUAL_FINAL,” and guess correctly which one to trust, because they have context: they remember the meeting, they know who owns the process, they can just ask. AI doesn’t get that fallback. It reads what’s in front of it and treats every file as equally authoritative, including the wrong one.

If This Sounds Familiar…

Turns out I’m not the only one who noticed. Other people are seeing the same problem from angles most enterprise practitioners rarely get access to. Amit Shivpuja, who runs data and AI enablement at Walmart, wrote in Forbes that he watched a fully governed, well-modeled AI program produce inconsistent results anyway, and traced it to what he calls the missing documentation layer: the context that should have been captured during requirements, design, and testing, but instead lived in a Slack thread or in someone’s head (The Hidden Barrier To Enterprise AI: The Missing Documentation Layer). His diagnosis lines up with a decade of watching the same pattern play out: humans compensate for missing documentation with tribal knowledge. AI can’t.

The gap between AI investment and AI payoff backs this up at scale. 79% of organizations report real challenges getting AI to deliver, a double-digit jump from the year before, even as most are raising budgets to feed it (WRITER). Separately, only 32% of organizations report sustained business impact from AI despite 86% of the C-suite increasing investment, according to an Accenture survey (Forbes). Nobody breaks that spend down into prompt engineering versus architecture versus training, but odds are good most of it lands in exactly those three buckets. It’s not usually the prompts, the architecture, or the training that’s failing. It’s the context underneath all three.

How to Get Started

None of that makes training, architecture, or prompt engineering optional. They’re not, and treating them as afterthoughts would be its own kind of mistake. Training your people is worth the time and the awkward learning curve that comes with it, every time. Architecture done right is what lets a foundation hold up for years while the technology running on top of it changes every few weeks, so it’s worth building solid instead of patching forever. And prompt engineering isn’t dead, whatever this month’s headlines are claiming. Knowing how to ask well is still what gets the new, flashier capabilities to actually do what you meant instead of what you typed.

But the potential of all that value depends on how well it works with your enterprise data. We’re past the point of needing to prove AI will benefit the business. We’re all now in the throes of how it will benefit the business, and that how stays severely limited until you put your data in order. Here are a few tips to get you started.

Make documentation part of done, not an afterthought to done. Shivpuja’s Forbes piece gets this right: a story or a feature isn’t finished until the meaning, the rules, and the assumptions behind it are captured somewhere a model can find them. That’s a process change, not a tooling purchase.

Default to read-only. Force intent for edits. If a document is finished, save it that way, and make someone actively choose to reopen it for editing. This has been true since 2022, and the fix hasn’t gotten any harder to implement. Just more expensive to keep skipping.

Give it a taxonomy and a living Read Me, and actually maintain both. This isn’t new advice. Generative AI just raised the stakes on it: organize things so someone new can find their way around without a tour guide, pin an explanation of that structure somewhere obvious, and keep it current as the team and the work change (Failure to plan communications). A taxonomy that was accurate in 2022 and hasn’t been touched since is worse than no taxonomy at all, because it still looks trustworthy.

Attach context to the asset, not to a folder that might get reorganized next quarter. Documentation living next to the process or dataset it describes survives longer than documentation living in a wiki page someone has to remember exists.

Convert for the machine, not just for the human. Pandoc, or whatever your equivalent is, exists to clear that baggage out before it hits a vector store. Word and PDF files are full of formatting decisions that made sense to a human editor and mean nothing to an LLM. Fifteen minutes of conversion saves a RAG pipeline from tripping over someone’s decade-old formatting habits. This is architecture work too, for what it’s worth, just the boring kind that doesn’t show up in a vendor pitch.

Set a review cadence, and mean it. One knowledge-management vendor’s own market analysis cites a 2025 Gartner study putting the number at 60% of internal knowledge articles going stale within six months, with only 14% of teams auditing content on any real schedule (source, with a grain of salt: it’s a page selling a fix for the exact problem it’s describing, but the shape of the number matches what shows up across most enterprise environments). A tool that flags stale content is nice. A team that actually looks at the flag on a schedule is the part that works. Buying a self-updating knowledge base without building the habit of using it just moves the swamp to a nicer-looking pond.

If Data Debt were a Thing…

There’s a term for this that architects already understand: technical debt. Every shortcut taken to ship faster accrues interest, and the bill always comes due, usually at the worst possible time and for more than the original shortcut would have cost to do right.

Documentation disarray runs on the same math. Call it data debt. It accrues every time a taxonomy goes unmaintained, a Read Me goes stale, or a “final” draft ships without anyone reconciling it against the other four drafts sitting next to it. None of that shows up on a balance sheet, so nobody budgets against it. But your prompts, your architecture, and your training program are all paying interest on it anyway, every time they inherit whatever your documentation can actually support.

Pay it down early and it stays cheap: a taxonomy tightened now, a template’s date field fixed before it propagates through a hundred more copies. Let it ride, and the interest compounds. More conflicting drafts pile up. More tribal knowledge walks out the door with the people who had it. More AI output gets built on documentation that was already lying to you, and the eventual fix means untangling years of it instead of an afternoon of it. Ignore it long enough and it doesn’t just get expensive, it bankrupts the whole initiative: the AI program that never delivered, the budget that got pulled, the “we tried AI and it didn’t work” verdict that was actually a documentation problem wearing an AI costume.

Fix the documentation first. It’s not sexy, nobody gets interviewed on a podcast for cleaning up a taxonomy, and it’s exactly the debt payment that keeps the rest of the investment solvent.

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© Scott S. Nelson

Meet Deadlines and Manage Technical Debt with AI-Assisted Architecture

tl;dr: New platform. Deadline. The instinct is to move fast and clean it up later. That’s where technical debt is born. A well-constructed Claude project, loaded with curated platform documentation and queried with the experience to know what to ask and how to evaluate the responses, tactically compresses the ramp-up without sacrificing strategic design principles.


The Sharp Fork in the Road

Every architect and engineering lead who has given a project to deliver on a new platform or with new technology under deadline pressure knows this fork. Pushing for proper preparation can get you marked (ironically) as a risk from the leadership perspective. Plowing forward using old techniques without understanding the new nuances keeps you up at night…either knowing you are missing something up front, or fixing what you didn’t know during the final death-march phase of a waterfall project that just happens to use Kanban boards, daily stand ups, and sprint ceremonies.

One path: move fast. Learn just enough to ship. Ask support when you hit a wall. Request exceptions when you hit limits. Get it working and tell yourself you’ll revisit the architecture when there’s more time. (There is never more time.) What you build in that mode becomes the foundation everything else is built on, and the cost of fixing it compounds with every sprint.

The other path: slow down. Read the documentation properly. Understand the platform’s constraints before you design around them. Make the right call the first time. This is correct and often impractical. Deadlines are real. The platform is new. The documentation is dense. The team is waiting.

The Contentstack project that prompted this post took the first path and ran into a SaaS governance constraint that happens to be measured recursively. The first time it was hit, the response was typical for teams working with a new SaaS vendor and release date that was set before the first line of code was written: Ask for an exception. Which was granted, hit again and raised again. Fortunately, the third time it happened, an experienced vendor support manager recommended reviewing best practices to avoid the issue. And an experienced architect was on the receiving end of that suggestion, one who had previously dealt with a Salesforce solution that went down three months after launch from relying on similar exceptions.

This post is not about Contentstack architecture. It is about the challenge many teams face with balancing target dates and defensive design decisions, and a tool set to apply in order to keep from tipping too far in either direction.


Claude as a Platform Research Partner

Giving Claude access to a curated set of platform documentation and then working interactively to explore solutions is not a replacement for architectural experience. It is an accelerant for it. It is also not a way to do away with architects or the inclusion of design tasks at the feature or story level. It is how to fulfill the expectation that AI can provide ROI immediately when applied by experienced technologists.

These distinctions matter. It’s never about “ask Claude what to do” (because if you need to ask “what” you won’t know how to ask “how” when the time comes). It is “I understand how systems like this behave, I know which constraints are likely to compound, and I need to move through the analysis faster than I could alone.” Experienced architects and engineers bring the judgment: familiarity with how content models fail at scale, how schema resolvers typically handle recursion, how vendor-imposed limits usually reflect real constraints in the underlying system. Claude brings the recall, the scripting, the cross-referencing, and the tireless patience for the kind of recursive schema analysis that would take a senior engineer the better part of a day.

For those that follow my posts you know that I will often describe theoretical solutions backed by a combination of personal experience where they would have worked linked to examples from others who demonstrated that they work. In this case the experience came before the theory, working backwards from a result where I noticed the process while documenting the solution (because, hey, that is what architects do after they solve something).

The working example was with a Contentstack implementation. It took one focused 2-hour session to identify an obscure root cause, define a strategic solution, discover other areas to apply the same solution, and identify where the solution would cause more harm than good. A second 30-minute session was applied after the first round of refactoring to validate the impact and prioritize the remaining effort. Before Generative AI, this would have been several days of effort that would not have been attempted until the risk was realized in production delay.


The Project is the Architecture

Before a single question gets asked, the project has to be built. This is not setup overhead. This is the work.

A blank Claude chat window and a well-constructed project will give you very different results on the same question. The difference is not the AI. It is the knowledge boundary, the taxonomy, the instructions, and the accumulated session output. Strip those away and you have a general-purpose assistant guessing at context. Keep them and you have something that behaves like a senior researcher who has been on the project for months.

What goes in the project folder:

Downloaded documentation as markdown files, not links. Links go stale, require fetches, and introduce latency. Pull the platform docs that matter, save them as markdown, put them in the folder. For Contentstack: the Global Fields limitations page, the Content Modeling Best Practices guide, the Custom Fields documentation. Not every page in the docs. The ones relevant to the work. Knowing which ones matter is the first place architectural experience shows up.

Actual data from the platform. In this case, exported stack JSON. Claude can read it directly in the sandbox, run scripts against it, and cross-reference findings against the loaded documentation in the same session. That combination of curated docs and live data is what makes the diagnosis precise instead of speculative.

Session summaries. After each working session, have Claude produce a structured summary: the original problem, the conclusions, the evidence, the next steps. That file becomes the cold-start document for the next session. You don’t re-explain the context. You hand Claude the prior session’s output and continue. The knowledge compounds.

At some point (again, much of this requires human intuition gained through real-world experience), have Claude work with you to turn the summaries into a skill scoped to the specific platform, technology, or tool so that when they are in context these lessons learned will be applied automatically going forward.


The Taxonomy Is Not an Afterthought

Separate downloaded reference content from working session output. Nest folders by topic. /reference/, /sessions/, /data/ serve different purposes and should live in different places. This is not pedantry. It is how you make the project instructions work correctly, and how you find things six weeks later without rebuilding context from scratch.

If the platform has extensive documentation, don’t try to enumerate allowed URLs in the project instructions directly. Create a reference-urls.md, or per-topic files like contentstack-docs-urls.md, with an annotated, categorized list of approved sources. Claude works from the list. You maintain the list. It stays current and searchable.

The discipline compounds the same way the session summaries do. A well-organized project from session three makes session fifteen faster than session one.


The Project Instructions Are the Rules of Engagement

The instructions define how Claude behaves inside this knowledge space. Three things they need to do:

Challenge assumptions. If a question implies something not supported by the loaded documentation, say so. Don’t fill gaps with plausible-sounding answers. The most dangerous thing a research assistant can do is answer confidently on insufficient evidence. This instruction eliminates a whole category of hallucination risk before it starts.

Point out mistakes. If the framing of a problem is wrong, say so. This is the instruction most people skip and then complain about later. You want an assistant that pushes back, not one that validates your bad hypothesis and helps you build a case on sand.

Limit web searches to specific URLs. Unconstrained web search in a technical investigation introduces noise: outdated content, inconsistent sourcing, SEO-optimized answers that aren’t accurate. Lock it down. Specify which domains are permitted. For a Contentstack project, that’s contentstack.com/docs. Everything else requires explicit permission. If the approved URL list is long, store it in a markdown file in the project folder and point the instructions at it.


This Requires an Architect

Here is the part that does not get said enough.

You cannot point Claude at an unfamiliar platform, load a few docs, and expect it to diagnose architecture problems. You can try. What you’ll get is fluent, confident, and partially wrong.

There are many engineers capable of setting this up. The value of an architect doing the work is separation of concerns in roles. The architect’s role is to nail down processes and choices that allow engineers to focus on the best way to apply them.

In our Contentstack use case, the single session worked because the person directing it brought a deep understanding of adjacent technologies and the experience to know both what to ask and how to evaluate the responses. Specifically:

  • Recognizing that the error message pointed to a schema limit, not a code problem, because that’s how content platform resolvers typically surface constraint violations
  • Understanding that “recursive” in the documentation meant multiplicative compounding, not additive, based on how similar systems handle nested references
  • Knowing the fix had to leave the content model intact for authors, which ruled out several otherwise obvious approaches
  • Reading a Claude-generated Python script’s output and recognizing that the confident result provided the first time was due to looking in the wrong parts of the schema
  • Looking at a before/after instance table and determining whether the fix was actually complete or just moved the problem

None of that knowledge lives in the documentation itself. It transfers in from adjacent experience: content modeling, schema design, how platform resolvers work under the hood. Claude surfaces the platform-specific detail. The architect determines what it means.

The tool doesn’t replace experience. It supercharges it with speed and specific knowledge.


The Interaction Pattern

What the Contentstack session actually looked like, stripped of the platform specifics:

  1. State the problem. Provide the evidence: the error message, the exported schema, the documentation.
  2. Claude generates a hypothesis. Test it against the data.
  3. Diagnostic script written and run in the sandbox.
  4. Root cause confirmed. Fix designed. Impact predicted before any schema changes are made.
  5. Fix implemented. Follow-up session loads the new export and verifies the result.
  6. Summary file created. Next session’s candidates identified.

No magic. An architect with relevant adjacent experience, a fast and patient research partner, and a well-stocked project folder.


Prompts That Did Actual Work

These are worth examining because the techniques transfer to any platform.

“Describe in detail the cause of home_page_template having 24 instances, and instances of what?”

The second half of that question is the important part. Asking Claude to define what it is counting before giving the count forces precision on both sides. In technical sessions on an unfamiliar platform, jargon can mask shallow understanding without anyone noticing until the fix doesn’t work. The ability to ask that follow-up, to know that “instances” needed a definition before the number meant anything, comes from having debugged similar problems elsewhere. Use this pattern whenever an answer could be technically correct but operationally ambiguous.

“Create a summary file to feed to the next analysis session that includes the conclusions from this session combined with the original inputs. Format and sequence the file so that the next session can be as efficient as possible.”

Besides being familiar with adjacent technology, experience solving complex issues with Generative AI is why this is an approach for architects and engineers. Yes, Claude will now start compacting sessions on its own to improve efficiency, but having the sense that it is time to move to a new session is again an area where human experience beats relying entirely on the AI.

This prompt converts a working session into a durable asset. The phrase “format and sequence for efficiency” is carrying real weight: it tells Claude to think about how the file will be consumed, not just what it contains. The output becomes the cold-start document for the next session. Without it, every session re-derives context the previous one already established.

“Read the attached to get full context of the original issue, then review the contents of [folder] and determine if and how the issue has been improved.”

Sequencing does the work here. Claude gets the full prior-session summary before it touches the new data, so “improved” arrives with a precise definition attached. Without that order, it analyzes the new export without knowing what it’s comparing against. Prime with context before assigning the task, every time.

All three follow the same pattern. Context before task. Output format stated up front. It is not a methodology. It is just how you would brief a colleague who needs to be useful on short notice.


The Setup Is the Differentiator

Two teams, same platform, same error.

Team A has Claude. No curated project, no loaded docs, no taxonomy, no instructions. They get generic answers that feel helpful until they don’t hold up under the actual constraints of the platform.

Team B has a project built by someone with deep experience in adjacent technologies, content modeling, schema design, API behavior under constraint, who knows both what to ask and how to evaluate what comes back. Downloaded reference docs. Exported platform data. Session summaries that carry forward. Instructions that push back on bad assumptions.

Team B gets a root cause analysis, a fix, and a forward-looking roadmap. More importantly, they get it without accumulating the kind of structural debt that shows up six months later as an emergency.

A Note about Choosing Cowork

What I’m describing is not the typical use case for Claude’s project-based workspace. It is aimed at knowledge workers automating routine tasks: organizing files, generating reports, drafting communications. Productivity stuff. This is not that.

My choice of Cowork is based on my day-to-day work being mostly in documents and decks. This could also likely be done using Claude Code in an IDE for those that prefer that interface.

I became aware of how far outside the lines I was operating when someone asked what tool I was using, I explained it, and I watched the look on their face. You know the look.

I have been here before. I spent years using JMeter for continuous functional and regression API testing, which is not what JMeter is for. JMeter is a load and performance testing tool, and there are entire communities of people who will tell you this. They are correct and also missing the point, because once you understand how JMeter handles realistic randomized inputs and configuration-driven test selection, you end up with one codebase doing the work of four. I wrote about it. People told me I was doing it wrong. The tests kept passing, so.

It is common to analogize the similarities between physical tools and technical tools. “When all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail”, and “You can use a screwdriver as a chisel, but you really shouldn’t.” I’ve often used those myself. But the opposite analogies are also true. Most tools can be a weapon, and many tools can have multiple uses. While screwdrivers are still terrible chisels, some are great prybars, hole punches, and, yes, weapons. Same with software. Excel has spellcheck, but I’d never paste text into it before posting to a blog, but I have used formulas to parse text rather than writing a script to apply regex rules because it is faster and just as accurate. Use your tools to the extent of their value, and don’t underestimate their value or your ability to innovate.

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© Scott S. Nelson

The Gold Rush Was Never Just About Gold

TL;DR: Most people who chased the Gold Rush didn’t know what they were getting into. They saw headlines about fortunes and stories about how easy it was. Many went because their livelihoods were already threatened. Sound familiar?


Let’s be honest about who the average Gold Rush prospector actually was.

Not a rugged adventurer with a prospecting education and a solid savings account. Not someone who had studied geology or mapped the terrain. The typical forty-niner was a farmer whose crops had failed, a tradesman who had lost his shop, or a clerk who had read a breathless newspaper account and decided a long-shot bet beat a certain slow decline.

The California Gold Rush of 1848 and the Klondike rush of 1896 were separated by nearly fifty years and thousands of miles, but they drew from the same well: economic desperation dressed up as opportunity.

The context matters here, because without it the behavior doesn’t make sense.

The years leading up to the California rush included a global recession following the Panic of 1837, crop failures across the Midwest, and a population of young men with limited options. When James Marshall found gold at Sutter’s Mill in January 1848, the news didn’t just spread quickly, it spread selectively. The people who acted first were the ones who needed it most. Same story in 1896, when word of the Klondike strike reached Seattle and San Francisco during a prolonged economic depression that had pushed national unemployment past 20 percent. The ships heading north were not full of people with a plan. They were full of people with a problem.

Not everyone was running from something. Some were adventurers who wanted something different, or already had a good life and wanted something better. And not everyone coming out of a bad situation went in blindly. What almost everyone had in common were expectations that diverged sharply from how things turned out.

The relevant point is not that these people were reckless. It’s that economic pressure meant the average participant arrived undercapitalized, underprepared, and motivated primarily by someone else’s story of overnight success. They were chasing a headline, not a thesis. The results reflected that, in aggregate, almost immediately.

That pattern matters because it is not a 19th-century phenomenon. It is what every hype cycle looks like from the inside.

Each rush also moved in distinct waves. The rules that determined who succeeded in the first wave had almost nothing in common with what it took to win in the second. Most people who got swept up never stopped to ask which wave they were actually in. That question turned out to matter more than almost anything else.


First Wave: Right Place, Right Time, Right Creek

The first wave of California gold hunters had a genuine advantage. Here is what that advantage actually was. Not superior skill. Not better research. Proximity to the news.

Many of the earliest California prospectors were already in the territory: soldiers, settlers, and tradespeople who heard about Marshall’s discovery within weeks and moved fast. The surface deposits in the Sierra Nevada foothills were accessible, concentrated, and required almost no expertise to extract. A pan, a creek, and a willingness to stand in cold water for twelve hours were the main requirements. In that environment, showing up early mattered more than showing up prepared.

The Klondike told a similar first-chapter story. The initial claims along Bonanza and Eldorado Creeks were staked by prospectors already in the Yukon when George Carmack’s group made their discovery in August 1896. They were not the product of a coordinated strategy. They were in the right place when the right thing happened.

First-mover advantage is real. The people who moved fast in that window got a return no amount of later preparation could have replicated. But the window was short, the geography was finite, and it closed before most people had even heard the news.


Second Wave: The Pan Is Not Going to Save You

By 1852, the dynamics of the California Gold Rush had fundamentally changed. The surface deposits were gone. The creek beds that had yielded fortunes with a simple sluice box were picked clean by the first wave. The second wave arrived to find a very different landscape than the one the newspaper stories had described.

The prospectors who succeeded in the Second Wave did so through entirely different means. Hydraulic mining operations used high-pressure water jets to blast entire hillsides and process material through sluices, yielding gold at scale but requiring capital investment and systematic planning. Geologically-informed prospectors who understood quartz reef formations studied where gold veins actually formed and discovered productive sites where random panning had repeatedly failed. Syndicates pooled resources to fund deep shaft mines that reached deposits unreachable by individual surface workers.

Preparation was no longer an advantage. It was the entry requirement.

The Klondike replicated this pattern almost exactly. By the time the mass wave arrived in 1898 after a brutal trek over the Chilkoot Pass, which the Canadian government required each prospector to complete while carrying a year’s worth of supplies, the accessible claims were long staked. The prospectors who completed that crossing and still found nothing with a pan were not unlucky. They were late, and they were underprepared for the wave they had actually entered.

This is also where technology shows up on both sides of the ledger. The Industrial Revolution had already been displacing Eastern tradespeople and artisans for a generation, which goes a long way toward explaining why those gold rushes had the human fuel they did. Factory looms had replaced hand weavers. Steam-powered equipment had displaced skilled craftsmen. The Gold Rush was, in no small part, a downstream consequence of technological disruption seeking an economic escape valve. And then, within the rushes themselves, industrial technology, hydraulic systems, and organized mining operations began displacing the individual prospector. The image of the lone miner with a pan was already obsolete while people were still forming it.


Gold Wasn’t the Only Thing in Them Thar Hills

Some prospectors did strike it rich. The early arrivals at Coloma, the men who staked Bonanza and Eldorado before the word spread, the syndicates that scaled hydraulic operations with enough capital to actually move mountains. These were real winners. Gold was there. People found it. Fortunes were made.

But a parallel economy was running alongside the prospectors, quieter in the moment and, in the long run, more durable.

Sam Brannan did not own a gold claim. He owned a hardware store, and before he told anyone about the gold discovery, he bought up every pick, pan, and shovel in Northern California he could find. Then he walked through San Francisco holding a vial of gold dust, shouting about gold from the American River. He became California’s first millionaire. He did not find a single ounce himself.

Levi Strauss did not mine. He figured out that miners destroyed pants at an extraordinary rate and needed something that could survive the work. He made pants. Generational brand.

Wells Fargo did not mine. They moved money and packages for people who did. They are still here.

The common thread is not that these people were smarter than the prospectors. It is that they studied what the prospectors would certainly need rather than betting on where the gold might be. The uncertain bet was “this particular creek has gold.” The certain bet was “whoever finds the gold will need pants, tools, and a way to move money.” One of those bets required luck. The other required observation.

This path was available in the First Wave and Second Wave equally. It did not depend on timing. It scaled with the rush rather than competing within it. And it generated more durable wealth than almost anyone who was actually in the river.


The Roaring 20’s

Not the flapper and speakeasy era. This is the era of data centers and solopreneurs; dueling model metrics and learning evaluations; digital assistants evolving into personal agents and agentic automation that builds new automation agents. Billion-dollar funding rounds for companies that did not exist three years ago. Job titles that nobody had in 2021, now listed as critical hires. Entire industries trying to figure out if they are the disrupted or the disruptors, and running low on time to decide.

Models released on a Monday that are obsolete by Friday. Consultants who barely knew what a prompt was in 2022, now billing as AI transformation architects. Boardrooms demanding AI strategies before anyone has agreed on what problem they are solving. Vendors with “AI-powered” on the label whether the product has meaningfully changed or not.

The energy is real. The stakes are real. And unlike some previous cycles, so is the underlying technology.

The dot-com boom was real too. It produced Amazon, Google, and the infrastructure of the modern internet alongside thousands of spectacular failures. The AI shift is already demonstrating measurable productivity gains across industries, and the underlying technology is improving faster than most predictions have accounted for. Dismissing it as pure hype is the wrong read, and the people making that call loudest will look exactly like the analysts who declared the internet a fad in 1997.

The problem is not that people are excited about a real thing. The problem is that when real opportunity appears, it activates the same psychological patterns that sent underprepared people over a mountain pass in 1898. The gold rush mentality does not require the gold to be absent. It just requires the promise of gold to be louder than the instructions.

The opportunity is real. The question is whether you are building toward it, or just rushing toward it.


The AI First Wave Already Happened

From roughly 2022 through 2023, companies that moved aggressively into AI-native product development, workflow automation, or customer-facing AI features got real first-mover advantage: lower competition, compounding productivity gains, and a learning curve head start that is genuinely hard to close. Some of this was vision. Some was access. Some was timing. The window was real, and the returns were real.

Most businesses did not catch it. Large organizations move slowly by design, and procurement cycles are not calibrated for technology windows that last 18 months. That is not a criticism. It is a description of how large organizations actually work. (I have been in those rooms. Guilty.)

What it means is that most businesses are now in the Second Wave, whether they have acknowledged that or not.


Second Wave Requires a Different Playbook

The companies treating AI adoption as a First Wave problem in 2025 and 2026 are showing up in California in 1852 with a pan. The accessible value has been captured. What remains requires the methodical approach.

Imagine you could see exactly where your organization loses an hour a day to rework, manual handoffs, and decisions made on bad data. That is what a process audit produces. It is not glamorous. It does not show up in the conference keynote. But it is the difference between knowing where the gold is and hoping the next creek looks promising.

Start there, not with tool selection. Map where time, money, and errors concentrate in your current operations. Identify which problems AI can address with reasonable reliability, and which ones it will make worse by hallucinating confidently inside a business-critical workflow. Run contained pilots with defined success criteria before scaling anything. Build internal AI literacy and governance at the same time you build capability, not after something goes wrong publicly.

Then, only after you understand what AI can reliably do in your specific context, start redesigning processes to take advantage of it rather than bolting it onto what already exists. The order matters. Inverting it is how you end up running hydraulic equipment you do not know how to operate into a hillside you have not assessed.

[True story placeholder: add an example of a project or initiative where the stated plan and the available path did not match, and what it cost to discover that. A rollout, a migration, or a vendor implementation where the “easy button” turned out not to exist.]

Preparation is not glamorous. But it is the entry requirement now. That distinction matters.


The Niche Play Nobody Is Talking About

Here is the thing about Sam Brannan, Levi Strauss, and Wells Fargo: none of them would have been described as gold rush companies.

Brannan was a merchant. Strauss was a dry goods trader. Wells Fargo was an express and banking operation. The Gold Rush was the economic context that made their businesses thrive and scale, but their identity was not “gold rush business.” Their success was driven by the rush. They were not of it.

While the gold rush era was a boon to the merchant class, imagine if technology had been more advanced then. Gold is one of the most effective electrical conductors on earth. It does not corrode. It does not tarnish. It carries signal reliably in conditions that defeat most other materials. Today it is in every smartphone, every circuit board, every aerospace connector, and every implantable medical device. The miners panning those California creek beds were sitting on the raw material for the digital age and had no way to know it. They were chasing the obvious use. The compounding value was in applications that had not been invented yet.

AI is playing the same role for business processes right now, visible to anyone paying attention. It is the super conductor of this moment, not for electrons but for decisions, workflows, and the intelligence buried inside operations that were built for a different era. And just as the real gold economy grew around refining, transporting, and applying the metal rather than simply extracting it, the real AI economy is growing around discovering, implementing, and refining how AI connects to the work that organizations actually do.

Every organization trying to adopt AI will need clean, well-governed data. They will need people who can actually work alongside these tools rather than just technically access them. They will need integration between new AI capabilities and legacy systems that were built for a different era. They will need expertise in figuring out which processes actually benefit from AI involvement and which ones just look like they should.

None of that requires building a foundation model. None of it requires a large AI research budget. All of it requires observation, the same skill that made Sam Brannan wealthy while everyone else was panning creeks.

The businesses that build toward serving those needs may never be described as AI companies. They will be managed service providers, training firms, systems integrators, compliance consultants, data governance specialists. The AI boom will be the context that defines their era, even if it is not the label on their door.

That is not the consolation prize. That is the long game, and it has the most reliable odds.


Your Actual To-Do List

Three questions worth answering honestly before the next AI initiative.

Which wave are you actually in? If you are evaluating AI tools for general business adoption in 2025 or 2026, you are in the Second Wave. The First Wave is not waiting. Adjust your expectations and your approach accordingly.

Are you prospecting or supplying? If you are using AI to improve your own operations, you are prospecting. If you are building toward serving the certain needs AI adoption creates in your industry, you are supplying. Both are valid strategies with very different playbooks.

Are you auditing before you automate? The methodical prospectors of the Second Wave studied the geology before they dug. The equivalent is understanding your current processes, your data quality, your organizational readiness, and your actual use cases before purchasing a platform and announcing an AI strategy.

The Gold Rush did not reward the desperate or the hasty at scale. It rewarded the timely, the prepared, and the observant, in that order, depending on which wave you caught.

The AI boom is running the same playbook. The question is not whether the opportunity is real. It is whether you are building toward it the right way.

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© Scott S. Nelson

Clearing AI Adoption Bottlenecks: Lessons from Highway Planners

TL;DR: Traffic researchers discovered that adding more road often makes congestion worse, not better. Most AI rollouts are doing exactly that. The fix is the similar to what highway departments figured out decades ago: change behavior first, then worry about capacity.


I have spent more hours of my life commuting than I care to remember, and I have mixed feelings about how it (this is not about WFH vs RTO, which I also have some ambivalence about). OTOH, I can always think of things that would feel more productive. OTOH, the mental autopilot leaves room for solutions that eluded me during the working day. It is also a good time to contemplate paradigm shifts as they play out: from paper to digital, from MVC to SOA, from on-premise to cloud, and now everything(?) to AI.

The transitions that stick share a pattern. Not a hype arc. A pressure arc. The system resists, adapts, then acts like it was always this way. Different technology, same dynamics.

A lot like how people behave on the highway.

Deliberate Slowing to Speed Things Up

Transportation researchers spent years collecting data on traffic flows, tracking volumes before and after road expansions, mapping where congestion formed and how fast it returned. When Gilles Duranton and Matthew Turner analyzed the numbers across US cities, what they found ran counter to the prevailing assumption. A one percent increase in highway capacity produced almost exactly a one percent increase in driving (among other things). Add a lane, and within a few years congestion is back where it started, sometimes worse. They named it The Fundamental Law of Road Congestion. The instinct to build more road was not just ineffective. It was making the problem worse.

Separate research produced an equally counterintuitive result. In 2008, Yuki Sugiyama and colleagues put 22 cars on a circular track and told everyone to hold a steady speed. No merges, no accidents, no bottleneck. Yet above a certain density, a jam appeared out of nowhere and rippled backward through the pack. One driver braked slightly, the car behind overcorrected, and the wave propagated. A traffic jam with no external cause. The fix was not more road. It was more deliberate driving: leave a gap, anticipate, resist the urge to overcorrect.

These findings changed practice. Highway departments that once defaulted to expansion started investing in variable speed limits, ramp metering, and traffic calming measures. Smaller interventions, aimed at behavior rather than capacity, moved more cars through at lower cost. The road mattered less than how people used it.

Same Jam, Different Road

The parallel is direct, and I have watched it play out from both sides of the table. MIT’s Project NANDA found that after roughly $30 to $40 billion in enterprise AI spending, about 95 percent of organizations saw no measurable impact on the bottom line, with only around 5 percent of pilots producing real revenue. That is not a rounding error. It is the Fundamental Law of Road Congestion applied to a software budget: thirty to forty billion dollars worth of new lanes, and most of the cars are barely moving (or heading in the wrong direction).

The organizations stalling out follow a common pattern: tools deployed before workflows get redesigned; licenses purchased before anyone has defined what problem they are solving; metrics devised to measure what was done over what is possible. (That last reminding me of my favorite quote of contested origin.) When results disappoint, the leadership of organizations struggling with AI adoption initiatives either pull back everything or double down with a broader mandate and no clearer strategy. Both reactions make the jam worse. Adding capacity without fixing the underlying process is the detour. The congestion moves, but it does not clear.

The phantom jam dynamic shows up here too, and it spreads faster than any highway bottleneck. One over-tasked leader reads a discouraging headline, taps the brakes, and suddenly the whole initiative is under review. Or a competitor ships something flashy and someone stomps on the gas with a company-wide mandate before anyone is ready or knows where to go. The density of anxiety crosses a threshold, and the shockwave does the rest. Nothing structural changed. Behavior caused the jam, and only behavior can smooth it.

Where the Congestion Actually Forms

The real bottlenecks in AI adoption are rarely where struggling enterprise leadership looks for them. The tool is not usually the problem. The problem is everything around the tool: unclear ownership, undefined success criteria, and a workforce that was handed a license with no guidance on what problem it was supposed to solve. I have seen teams buy Copilot seats for every developer in the org and then measure success by activation rate. They got activation. They did not get output. Those are not the same thing, and conflating them is how you burn a year and come back to the next planning cycle with nothing to show for it.

There is also a shadow traffic problem that nobody talks about enough. When the official AI rollout is too slow, too restricted, or too vague, people route around it. They use personal ChatGPT accounts. They paste sensitive data into consumer tools. They build their own prompts in the gaps the IT department did not anticipate. This is not rebellion. It is adaptation. It is what happens when capable people hit a congestion point and look for the on-ramp the original road designers missed. The workaround is a signal, not a discipline problem. Ignoring it does not make it stop. It just makes it invisible.

Governance is the infrastructure that never gets funded until something goes wrong. Who is accountable when the model is confidently wrong? What happens to the output when the underlying model changes? Which data is allowed in, and which is not? These are not legal abstractions. They are the guardrails that let the rest of the system move faster. Organizations that build them early spend less time recovering from incidents and more time compounding on the investment. Skipping governance to move faster is the merge lane strategy. It feels efficient right up until everyone is stopped.

The Mandate That Made It Worse

Everett Rogers mapped how innovations spread through a population decades before generative AI existed: early adopters first, then the majority, then the laggards. The laggards are rarely the problem. They are often waiting for the road to be built around the tool, clear governance, reliable data, a documented sense of who is accountable when something goes sideways. Mandating faster adoption without building that infrastructure does not accelerate the curve. It creates congestion earlier in the journey, and the shockwave from that early jam takes longer to resolve than the time you thought you were saving.

Organizations that lead with training and strategic framing before deployment consistently outperform those that lead with usage mandates. When people understand what a tool is for, what it does well, and where it falls short, they use it in ways that compound over time. When they are handed a tool and told to use it more, they find ways to hit the metric without changing how they actually work. Activity goes up. Value does not follow.

Incentives tied to outcomes, paired with genuine investment in skills and strategy, produce something different: people who understand where they are going and why the tool helps them get there.

Getting Somewhere

Better roads move more people than bigger roads. The organizations getting real returns from AI are not the ones with the most licenses. They are the ones with the clearest processes, the best-trained people, and a strategy that connects the tool to an actual destination.

Define what success looks like before you deploy. Name the problem before you buy the solution. That clarity reduces friction for everyone involved, and it makes the detours worth something when they happen, because the detours will happen. The unexpected use case, the team that figured out something no roadmap would have suggested, the finding that reframes the whole initiative: those are not failures of planning. They are what happens when capable people have good tools and room to move. The goal is not to prevent detours. It is to be in good enough shape to recognize a promising one when it appears, rather than sitting too stuck to turn.

The lane was never the problem.

(Next up: the joys of reading on public transportation.)

If you found this interesting, please share.

© Scott S. Nelson