Monitoring as emotional labour
Human Cost

When Monitoring Becomes Emotional Labour

When systems rely on emotional vigilance, they do not scale. They drain.

Human Cost

"When systems rely on emotional vigilance, they do not scale. They drain."

Monitoring is often described as a technical task.

In reality, it becomes emotional labour when: someone must constantly worry about what might fail, someone must stay alert so others can feel safe, someone absorbs uncertainty so the system appears stable.

This labour is rarely acknowledged. It does not appear in dashboards. It is not reflected in productivity metrics. But it accumulates.

People begin to feel responsible for outcomes they cannot control. Anxiety replaces clarity. Fatigue appears without visible cause.

When systems rely on emotional vigilance, they do not scale. They drain.

This is not a people problem. It is a structural one.