The Confusion Tax: Why We Overpay for Silence
Why does the traveler always pay for what they do not understand?
In the world of escape room design, there is a concept we call “unearned failure.” If a player reaches a locked door and hasn’t found the key, that is a fair challenge. If the player finds the key, but the lock is rusted shut and requires forty pounds of pressure to turn, that is unearned failure.
The player did the intellectual work, but the mechanics of the environment refused to cooperate. They are punished not for a lack of wit, but for a breakdown in the medium of the game itself.
The Rusted Lock of Language
International travel operates on a similar, often more expensive, logic. When you stand on a street corner in a city where you do not speak the language, you are essentially trapped in an escape room where the clues are spoken at eighty miles per hour. You might have the money, the destination, and the intent, but the medium-the language-is rusted shut.
At a taxi stand in Istanbul, near the chaotic throat of the Eminönü ferry docks, a man named David is experiencing this unearned failure. David is , an architect from Chicago, and generally a man who prides himself on precision. He needs to get to a boutique hotel in Galata.
The driver,
