Why Some People Hold Under Pressure and Others Snap
Two people take the same hit. One holds. One snaps. The usual story says the first one had more willpower, as if character were fuel in a tank you spend down until you run dry. That model cannot explain why the same person holds one month and folds the next, or why the toughest-looking people break first. The Stoics ran a better model. They thought character was held together by tension, the way a structure is, and they had a precise word for that tension: tonos. Strong distributed tension holds under load. Slackness collapses. Rigidity snaps. You do not rise to pressure. You fall to the tension you keep when nothing is testing you.