Standing at the bus stop, I watched the red taillights of the number 45 disappear into the grey haze of a Fort Saskatchewan morning, exactly ten seconds before my hand could reach the door. There is a specific kind of internal heat that rises when you do everything right-set the alarm, lace the boots, run the three blocks-and still end up staring at a cloud of diesel exhaust while the clock ticks toward a late arrival.
That exact sensation, that mixture of “I was promised this would work” and “now I have to live with the consequences,” is precisely what happens in the fluorescent-lit aisles of a countertop showroom.
The Inspection Mindset
Iris E.S. knows this feeling better than most, though she usually encounters it in the form of spalling concrete and rusted rebar. As a bridge inspector, her entire career is built on the reality that materials do not care about your aesthetic preferences; they only care about how they interact with salt, weight, and time.
When she walked into a local showroom last Tuesday, she wasn’t looking for “trending” colors. She was looking for a surface that wouldn’t make her feel like a failure if she forgot to wipe up a ring of coffee before heading out to inspect the piers on a overpass.
