Serendipity

So, the next time the universe throws a wrench in your plans—when the bus is late, when the rain soaks your shoes, when the internet goes out—don't curse the chaos.

Sociologists call this “weak tie theory.” Your deepest secrets are for your partner; your next job opportunity is for the person in the elevator. The most valuable information flows not from your close friends (who know what you know), but from the periphery—the cab driver, the person in the bookstore line, the friend-of-a-friend at a wedding. Serendipity

The result? A filter bubble of the soul. We never stumble upon the bookstore we didn’t search for. We never hear the band whose name we can’t pronounce. We lose the “friction” that produces surprise. So, the next time the universe throws a

Scientists do this. When an experiment gives a “weird result,” they don’t delete it. They write it down. In life, when something odd happens—a wrong number text, a cancelled flight, a random invitation—don’t ignore it. Ask: What if this is useful? The Beauty of the Unscripted There is a word in Portuguese: desenrascanço . It means the art of clumsily extricating yourself from a difficult situation using available means. It is the spirit of MacGyver, of the jazz musician who plays a wrong note and makes it the hook. The result