The silver-wrapped mint sat in the corner of the cup holder, its branded paper crinkling slightly under the weight of a stray nickel. It was the last physical artifact of the Three-Day Leadership Summit, a small, sugary souvenir of a “transformative” weekend.
On Friday, that mint had been part of a meticulously curated experience: the high-thread-count linens, the smell of expensive hotel espresso, and the booming bass of the walk-on music. By Wednesday, it was just trash Daniel didn’t want to touch because his hands were already full of a cold breakfast burrito.
It is on a Wednesday morning and Daniel, a sales director who manages 42 people and a recurring nightmare about quarterly margins, is sitting in his car in the office basement. He is scrolling back through his camera roll, searching for the photo he took of the speaker’s final slide.
The slide was titled “The Seven Pillars of the Relentless Soul.” He squints at the pixelated text. He remembers the feeling of the room when that slide appeared-the collective intake of breath, the frantic scratching of pens on expensive notebooks. He remembers thinking, This is it. This is the one that changes everything.
The Decay of the Parking Garage
Now, in the dim, fluorescent hum of the parking garage, he cannot reconstruct what a single one of