
The cycle that began with [YOU] on AI takes the orange pill as both a perceptual and an emotional act: seeing the machine clearly requires standing in the actual uncertainty of the transition, and standing in that uncertainty means feeling what it costs. The book documents the engineer who cannot sleep, the designer who stops volunteering for the projects she loved, the analyst who has become inexplicably irritable in every meeting where AI is discussed. These are not personality problems or management challenges. They are grief responses—appropriate, recognizable, and necessary stages in the process of genuinely adapting to a change that has restructured the meaning of the work.
The cycle's account of AI as an amplifier is relevant here: the machine amplifies what is fed to it, and organizations that suppress mourning are feeding it an unprocessed signal. The performance they get from people who are grieving without permission is performance organized around loss rather than around the new contribution they have not yet been allowed to discover. The holding environment that permits mourning is not a therapeutic luxury. It is the infrastructure for the productive signal that genuine adaptation produces.
The parallel with Coase's analysis is instructive: where Coase explains the structural reorganization of the firm's boundary by economic forces, Heifetz explains the internal reorganization of professional identity that must accompany it. The Coasian boundary can be moved by cost analysis; the mourning that its movement requires in the people whose identities were built around the activities now on the wrong side of the boundary cannot be mandated or incentivized. It must be permitted, and permission requires leaders who understand that grief is adaptive work, not its enemy.
Heifetz drew the mourning concept from multiple traditions. From his training as a physician and psychiatrist, he drew the understanding that emotional processing is not separate from functional recovery but its mechanism: the patient who cannot acknowledge the diagnosis cannot reorganize her life around the new reality. From Elisabeth Kubler-Ross's grief research, he drew the understanding that loss has stages, that skipping them produces not acceleration but deferral, and that the neutral zone between the old identity and the new one is not empty but generatively uncertain. From William Bridges's work on transitions, he took the framework of ending, neutral zone, and new beginning—the observation that genuine transitions begin with endings that must be honored before new beginnings are possible.
The application to organizations was Heifetz's own development. He observed that organizations under adaptive pressure consistently attempted to move directly from the disruption to the new arrangement without passing through the ending. The loss of the old competency was reframed as skill development; the threat to the old identity was reframed as opportunity; the grief was reframed as resistance. Each reframing reduced anxiety and prevented adaptation. The organizations that successfully navigated adaptive challenges were the ones that created space—deliberately, structurally, not just rhetorically—for the ending. This was not a common organizational practice, and Heifetz's contribution was to argue that its absence was not a cultural quirk but a systematic and costly failure.
Mourning as Mechanism, Not Obstacle. Grief is not a delay in the path to adaptation; it is part of the path itself. The person who has grieved the identity built around manual coding is free to discover the identity built around architectural judgment in a way that the person who has suppressed the grief is not, because the suppression consumes the energy and attention that the discovery requires. The paradox Heifetz insists on is that the fastest path through the adaptive challenge runs through the slowest process.
What Must Be Mourned. Heifetz identifies three categories of loss in a typical adaptive challenge: the loss of competency (what I could do that is now less necessary), the loss of identity (who I was because of that competency), and the loss of community (the relationships organized around the shared work). All three are present in the AI transition. All three require genuine acknowledgment. A reskilling program addresses the first; it does nothing about the second or third, which is why people who complete reskilling programs may acquire new tools while continuing to mourn the identity and community that the disruption took.
The Holding Environment for Mourning. Mourning requires structural conditions that most technology organizations do not provide. It requires safety—the assurance that vulnerability will not be punished or weaponized. It requires time—the conviction that the transition will not be declared complete before the internal work is done. It requires language—vocabulary for loss that the professional culture has declared out of bounds. The leader's task is to build and maintain the holding environment within which this becomes possible, against the constant pressure to declare the transition complete and move on.
The Sorting of the Essential from the Expendable. Heifetz argues that the deepest work of mourning in an adaptive challenge is the sorting: distinguishing which elements of the old identity are essential and must be carried forward, and which are contingent artifacts of a particular technological moment that can be released. This sorting cannot be done by a manager or a consultant. It must be done by the individual, through the slow process of figuring out which parts of who she was are the parts that the new world will still need, valued in a different register. The sorting is what mourning makes possible.