CONCEPT
Rigidity Trap
A <em>pathological</em> conservation-phase configuration so tightly coupled it cannot release when release is necessary — accumulating suppressed disturbance until collapse is catastrophic.
The rigidity trap is the pathological extension of the conservation phase — a system that has accumulated so much structure and so many tight connections that it cannot reorganize even when reorganization is necessary. Each suppressed disturbance adds to accumulated vulnerability; the eventual release, when it finally comes, is correspondingly severe. The pre-AI technology industry exhibited all three signatures of the rigidity trap: overconnectedness between specialist roles, capital locked in configurations that could not be reallocated without dismantling the structures that held them, and progressive loss of disturbance memory among practitioners who had never experienced a release event.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Rigidity in the boreal forest manifests as fuel accumulation under decades of fire suppression. The forest becomes denser, more interconnected, more productive per unit area. The canopy closes. Every niche fills. The system hums with efficiency. And the fuel load reaches a threshold beyond which any ignition — a lightning strike, a careless campfire — produces not the small, manageable burns that the ecosystem evolved to absorb but a catastrophic