Most people believe failure breaks them.
Antonio Garrido Caballero argues something more precise: success does.
The Sylvatica Moment names the experience many high-functioning people quietly live through - when everything appears to be working, yet something essential feels off.
This is not burnout.
It is not weakness.
It is not a lack of discipline.
It is saturation.
Drawing from biological interruption patterns - including the survival mechanism of the wood frog (Rana sylvatica) - Garrido introduces a structural framework for understanding why systems collapse only after they have worked too well for too long.
A Sylvatica Moment is not the beginning of failure.
It is the signal that coherence is asking to be restored.
For professionals, leaders, entrepreneurs, educators, and anyone who senses misalignment beneath apparent success, this book offers a language for what has been difficult to name - and a way to interpret interruption as intelligent motion rather than defeat.
Before collapse makes the decision for you, understand the moment correctly.