This glossary distills systemic terms introduced in Quiet Realities essays into durable definitions. Each entry is principle-driven, portable, and reusable across contexts.
Readiness Capital
Gold held in households is not tracked for performance but retained for contingencies.
Definition:
Capital designed to wait — available under stress rather than optimized for growth.
Signal:
Gold is remembered under pressure, not tracked for performance.
Optionality Reserve
The latent flexibility gold provides when households face sudden obligations.
Definition:
A reserve that preserves choice in emergencies, even if rarely activated.
Signal:
Gold’s value lies in availability, not volatility.
Slow Capital vs. Clean Capital
Two contrasting modes of household finance.
Slow Capital:
Embedded assets like gold or heirlooms, accumulated through life events and resistant to portfolio logic.
Clean Capital:
Allocated assets like equities or bonds, tracked and audited for performance.
Signal:
Gold enters through life, not allocation.
Stress Exit
The distinctive way households liquidate gold.
Definition:
An exit driven by necessity rather than optimization, often accompanied by regret due to timing pressure.
Signal:
Gold exits under necessity, not optimization.
Guardrails
Editorial boundaries that prevent misinterpretation.
Household gold is not dead capital; it is resilience capital.
Household gold is not a portfolio asset; it is continuity capital.
Household gold is not a speculative instrument; it is embedded capital.