The Homescar
A friend of mine has been at the same company for eleven years. Three teams, two promotions, one internal transfer he describes as the most interesting year of his career.
He's not coasting. He knows which VP to call for which problem. He knows which meetings are theater and which ones move things. He's been through two reorgs and come out with more scope each time. He's genuinely good at what he does and the company knows it.
We were at dinner a few months ago and he said something I've been turning over since. He'd been thinking about leaving, not urgently, but the way you think about it after a decade, when the ceiling starts to feel familiar. He leaned forward and said: "I've built something here. I don't know if I could build it anywhere else."
That second sentence. Not "I don't want to leave." Not "the money is too good." He genuinely didn't know if the thing he'd become was portable.
On chalk coastlines, a limpet that returns to the same spot long enough grinds a depression into the rock. The mechanism is mechanical abrasion and slightly acidic mucus; over months, the substrate conforms to the shell's exact outline.
The depression then becomes a survival advantage. The seal between shell and rock improves. Desiccation drops. The force required to dislodge the limpet increases. The homescar is earned, through the act of staying.
Biologists call this niche construction: the process by which an organism modifies the conditions that determine its own fitness.
Here's the thing most people miss about it: the limpet isn't passive. The depression is the result of continuous activity. Every return to the same spot is a small act of construction. The trap isn't built through neglect. It's built through effort, over and over, each time a reasonable response to surviving.
My friend has a homescar. Not the one on his resume. The one in the company itself: the relationships calibrated to his working style, the institutional knowledge he holds that nobody else has assembled in quite his configuration, the two or three senior people who would advocate for him in a room he's not in, the way his manager reads his face before he's finished the sentence. That's not nothing. That's eleven years of construction.
And the company has one too, shaped in small ways around him.
Here's what tight fit does to perception: it removes the friction that would generate the signal. When the environment has adapted around you, you stop feeling the edges. The adapted state becomes baseline. The question "is this the right place for me?" becomes nearly impossible to answer honestly from inside the fit, because fit itself is what's blocking the view.
His professional world has converged, slowly, through reasonable choices, onto people who share his value system. Not because he's incurious. Because successful adaptation selects for it. You get close to people who recognize your wins as wins. You drift from people whose recognition function doesn't include your coordinates. Each step was sensible. The cumulative result is a social graph with invisible walls.
Everyone already knows about the RSU cliff. That's the visible trap, the one you can put a number on. The harder thing to see is what eleven years of calibration does to the evaluator. His framework for reading opportunities has been trained inside this environment. He can identify what's good within the system he understands. But identifying something that requires him to not know what he knows, to show up without orientation, requires information his adapted terrain has stopped producing.
There's a concept in machine learning for this failure mode. A system whose parameters determine its own training data reaches an equilibrium where neither the model nor the data changes, not because it learned everything, but because it can only see what its current state points toward. Researchers call it the bootstrap deadlock. The limpet arrives at the same place without needing the name.
I wrote in an earlier essay about meaningful work doing quiet spiritual duty you don't notice until it's gone. The homescar is the same mechanism in reverse: the environment does quiet structural work you don't notice until you try to leave. Both go undetected precisely because they're doing their job.
I want to be precise about what I'm not saying. Leaving doesn't dissolve a homescar. You can take your evaluator with you, go to a well-funded Series B that worships the same metrics, values the same signals, runs on the same ambient definition of what a good outcome looks like. The depression is in you now, not just the rock.
Marcia Bates, an information scientist, spent her career studying how people actually search for things versus how they think they do. Her finding: real search, the kind that finds things you didn't know to look for, doesn't work by refining the same query. It works by changing strategy altogether. Following citation chains backward until you're somewhere your original question never would have taken you. Scanning territory your current taxonomy has no vocabulary for. Stumbling into a neighboring section of the library that your mental map classified as irrelevant.
She was writing about libraries. The structure holds. The homescar narrows your search strategy. You keep running better and better queries against the same index. The outer loop starts outside your classification system.
Here's the test. Think of everyone whose opinion of your work you genuinely care about. Now ask: how many of them have a definition of success that's completely foreign to yours? Not someone who pushes back, not someone who challenges you (those you probably have). Someone whose framework for what counts as excellent doesn't include your coordinates at all. Someone whose opinion would actually surprise you.
If the honest answer is nobody, that's the finding. That's how deep the depression goes.
My friend is good at what he does. The company is better for having him. The homescar is real; it represents eleven years of genuine construction.
The question he was actually asking at dinner, the one he couldn't quite surface, was whether arriving and being done are the same thing. I don't think they are, for him or for most people I know. But I'm not sure you can answer it from inside the fit, which is part of what makes it hard to ask.