In 1972, Bobby Fischer arrived at the World Chess Championship in Reykjavik, Iceland acting like a man who didn't want to be there. He forfeited Game 2 by refusing to play because cameras were present. He threatened to go home repeatedly. He made demands that bordered on irrational. The Soviets — and most of the chess world — assumed he was cracking under pressure.
He wasn't. He was eliminating every distraction, controlling every variable he could control, and channeling the chaos into absolute focus. When the board was in front of him, Fischer dismantled Boris Spassky so completely that many consider it the greatest individual performance in chess history. What looked like a man falling apart was actually a man locked in.
Paul understood this dynamic better than most. Writing from prison in Rome — not exactly the ideal office — he told the church at Philippi something that must have surprised them: