For a while, I called it bad planning.
That felt polite.
Too polite.
Because bad planning would still imply there was a plan.
What happens here, more often than I would like, feels closer to reaction with confidence.
Meetings start one or two hours late and the excuse is traffic, as if traffic in Hanoi were a supernatural event nobody could possibly have predicted in advance.
House builds shift because documents were not checked properly before money moved.
Permits become philosophical only after someone has already committed capital.
Deliveries fail because the final step was apparently left to fate.
Paperwork multiplies because one office assumed another office had already explained the thing they themselves only half understand.
And through all of this, people still speak with astonishing confidence.
That is what makes it funny.
And exhausting.
The city is not short of opinions.
It is short of sequence.
Everything seems to be:
see first,
fix later,
blame traffic,
blame weather,
blame timing,
blame paperwork,
blame fate,
then improvise.
That is not planning.
That is a lifestyle.
And the problem is not only delay.
It is the re planning.
You do not just make a plan here.
You make a plan, then a correction, then a workaround, then a phone call, then a second workaround, then an uncle.
That becomes the real plan.
At some point I realized the country does not always fail to plan.
It often just plans by reaction.
Which is why living here can feel like trying to schedule your life inside someone else's unfinished group project.
You are not entering a system.
You are entering a sequence of adjustments.