Question
How do I practice blame instinct?
Quick Answer
Recall the last error, failure, or missed expectation you were involved in — at work, in a personal project, or a habit that broke down. Write two columns on a page. In the left column, write the 'who' story: who was responsible, what they should have done differently, why they failed. In the.
The most direct way to practice blame instinct is through a focused exercise: Recall the last error, failure, or missed expectation you were involved in — at work, in a personal project, or a habit that broke down. Write two columns on a page. In the left column, write the 'who' story: who was responsible, what they should have done differently, why they failed. In the right column, write the 'why' story: what conditions made the error likely, what information was missing, what system allowed or encouraged the failure. Compare the two columns. The left column ends at a person. The right column ends at a structure you can change. Time: 15 minutes.
Common pitfall: Concluding that 'blameless' means 'accountable to no one.' The point is not to eliminate accountability. It is to redirect it. In a blame culture, accountability means identifying the person who failed and punishing them. In a learning culture, accountability means identifying the systemic conditions that produced the failure and committing to change them. Confusing blamelessness with permissiveness creates environments where no one is responsible for anything — which is a different failure mode, not a solution.
This practice connects to Phase 25 (Error Correction) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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