The spirit level on my workbench is a liar, though not by choice. It’s an old tool, encased in a yellowed plastic frame that has seen better decades, and the green vial in the center holds a bubble of air that supposedly tells the truth about the world’s orientation. Last night, or rather this morning at , I was staring at that bubble while trying to figure out why the guest bathroom toilet was humming a low, mournful tune that suggested an imminent flood.
I’d just replaced the fill valve, a task that should take but inevitably takes when you’re working by the light of a dying flashlight and your own irritation. I leveled the tank. I leveled the floor. I checked the pipes. On paper-or by the bubble-everything was perfectly aligned. Yet the water kept trickling. The system was “correct,” but the reality was wet socks and a mounting sense of futility.
Systems have a way of doing that. They promise a certain standard of performance, a level line of expectation, but they rarely account for the porosity of the ground they sit on.
The Uniform Experience Myth
I was thinking about this a few hours later, fueled by far too much caffeine and a lingering resentment toward plumbing, when a