When Readiness Goes Wrong: Understanding Pathological Readiness in Human Systems

Most leaders assume that readiness is always a good thing — that if people are “ready for change,” the organisation is heading in the right direction. But readiness is not inherently positive. It is structurally neutral. And in the wrong conditions, people can become highly ready for the wrong kind of change.

I first saw this clearly while working in the prison system. Many inmates were not apathetic, unmotivated, or resistant. Quite the opposite. They were energised, committed, and highly adaptive. They were ready — but their readiness was pointed in a destructive direction.

This is what I call pathological readiness.

Pathological readiness is not a psychological flaw — it is a structural outcome

People don’t become ready for harmful change because they are broken. They become ready because the structures around them shape their identity, their meaning, and their sense of possibility.

In prisons, those structures often include:

  • criminal peer networks

  • poor work histories

  • addictions and impulsivity

  • low educational attainment

  • rigid identity myths (“this is who I am”)

  • survival‑based meaning systems

These conditions create a narrow possibility space. Within that space, certain behaviours make sense, certain identities feel coherent, and certain futures feel believable. Readiness grows — but it grows in the direction the structure allows.

Readiness is a directional force

Healthy readiness requires:

  • capability

  • agency

  • openness

  • constructive identity

  • supportive conditions

Pathological readiness emerges when:

  • capability is misdirected

  • agency is fused with harmful identity

  • openness is limited to destructive options

  • conditions reward maladaptive behaviour

  • meaning is built around survival, not growth

The readiness engine is the same. The direction is different.

Why this matters for leaders

Pathological readiness is not limited to prisons. It appears in organisations when:

  • teams are energised but aligned to the wrong priorities

  • subcultures reward shortcuts or avoidance

  • identity becomes fused with outdated practices

  • people are ready to defend the status quo, not evolve it

  • urgency is high but insight is low

Leaders often misread this as “resistance.” It is not resistance. It is misdirected readiness.

The leadership task

The task is not to “motivate” people. The task is to reshape the conditions that determine what people become ready for.

When you change:

  • the structures people identify with

  • the meaning systems they draw from

  • the narratives that define what is possible

  • the relationships that reinforce behaviour

…you change the direction of readiness.

Pathological readiness is not a failure of people. It is a failure of conditions.

And when conditions change, readiness can be reclaimed.

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