Escalating Pressure: Unresolved Execution and the Loss of Resolution explores pressure as a systems-level indicator of unresolved execution rather than failure alone. Across biological, organizational, ecological, and social systems, substantial loads can be tolerated when movement, translation, distribution, and exit remain possible. Problems emerge when load continues to arrive but can no longer resolve. Under these conditions, pressure accumulates. This Convergence Series paper proposes four possible fates of load—completion, distribution, exit, and accumulation—and examines how escalating pressure develops when resolution pathways narrow. Pressure is presented as a Failure-stage landmark within the Convergence framework, often appearing before visible collapse and while systems remain highly active. The paper further explores the relationship between pressure and capacity, arguing that persistent pressure consumes optionality and redirects resources toward containment rather than movement. As compensation intensifies, capacity may be depleted long before structural failure becomes visible. This work forms part of the Lantern of Sulfur (LoS), Vertical Terrain Axis Convergence Series and connects with related papers on continuation, hinges, directional flow, and capacity preservation. This preprint presents a conceptual systems model intended to generate hypotheses and improve pattern recognition across complex adaptive systems. It is not a treatment protocol or substitute for professional medical care. For the complete Lantern of Sulfur framework, reading order, and updated convergence dynamics materials, see the Lantern of Sulfur Master Index:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17915492
Beth Ann Martell (Tue,) studied this question.