We humans are endlessly obsessed with the horizon. We stand on the shores of the present, squinting into the distance, trying to discern the exact shape of tomorrow. We build elaborate models, draw flawless trendlines, and construct five-year plans with the meticulous care of a master architect drafting a blueprint. And, to our credit, most of the time we are remarkably accurate about the mundane trajectory of it all. We know when the seasons will change, how our compound interest should accumulate, and roughly where our careers might lead if we just keep putting one foot in front of the other.
“We are very good at predicting the future, except for the surprisesโwhich tend to be all that matter.”
โ Morgan Housel, Same as Ever
It is a profound truth wrapped in a deceptively simple observation.
When we look back at the grand sweep of historyโor simply the quiet narrative of our own individual livesโthe defining moments are almost never the ones we carefully penciled into our calendars.
The things that irrevocably alter our trajectories are the sudden shocks, the absolute anomalies, the unexpected phone calls on a random Tuesday afternoon.
Think about the turning points of the last decade. The events that completely rewired our global society, our economies, and our daily habits were not predicted by think tanks, algorithms, or pundits. They were the blank spaces on the map. They were the surprises.
On a personal level, I find this resonates with almost uncomfortable accuracy. If I examine the hinges upon which my own life has swung, they were completely invisible to me until the exact moment I arrived at them. The chance encounter in a crowded room that led to a lifelong bond; the sudden, jarring loss that forced a complete re-evaluation of my priorities; the seemingly disastrous failure that ended up opening a door I hadn’t even known existed. I have spent so much of my life optimizing the straight lines, unaware that life itself is actually lived in the zig-zags.
We suffer from a collective illusion of control. We desperately want to believe that by accumulating enough data, we can permanently banish uncertainty.
But data is simply a record of what has already happened; it cannot account for the unprecedented. It cannot measure a sudden shift in human psychology, a freak accident, or the spontaneous spark of a revolutionary idea.
The surprises are all that matter because they force adaptation. They break the fragile mold of our expectations. They are the crucibles in which our real, unvarnished growth occurs.
When the predictable happens, we just keep sleepwalking down the path. It is only when the unexpected strikes that we are forced to wake up, look around, and decide who we actually need to become.
This shouldn’t be a cause for despair, nor is it a valid excuse to abandon planning altogether. Dwight D. Eisenhower captured this paradox perfectly when he noted:
“In preparing for battle I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable.”
The written plan itselfโthe rigid timeline, the expected outcomesโmight shatter upon impact with reality. But the act of planning? That is essential. It forces us to take inventory of our resources, establishes a baseline direction, and builds mental agility. The danger doesn’t lie in the act of preparing, but in attaching our ultimate peace of mind to the exact realization of a fragile script.
Perhaps the most rational way to face the future is with a sense of prepared humility. We can plot our course, pack our provisions, and meticulously check the compass.
But we must also accept that a sudden, unforecasted storm might blow us onto an entirely different continent. And when we finally wash ashore on that strange new land, exhausted and disoriented, we might just find that it is exactly where we were meant to be all along. Seek serendipity.
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