Or is that all of us
and I feel unfairly – and inaccurately – singled out?
coincidence: a remarkable
concurrence of events or circumstances without apparent causal connection.
Oh yeah. Here we go.
To me, “coincidence” is an evading euphemism for “I have no
idea how that happened.”
I admit there are some
actual coincidences in life. But
since the concept “coincidence” is readily available, a lot of unexplainable
happenstances are lazily consigned to that tenuous classification. A “remarkable concurrence of events” pops
onto your personal radar screen, for which you have no satisfactory rationale?
“It’s a coincidence.”
AKA: “It’s an mystery.”
AKA: “It is God’s will.”
To which I say, “Thank you for three generically unsatisfying
explanations.”
For me, though perhaps not for people on a more reliably
sound mental health footing, a coincidence is like the “Cold Cases” on those police
shows. Unwilling to accept “It’s a
coincidence”, I cannot comfortably rest until that unsubstantiated file is
conclusively stamped “Solved.” (Do they
actually do that? They should. What a rewarding sense of “closure” that
would be, slamming a big “Solved” stamp onto the appropriate folder. What a powerful incentive to keep going. “Go for the ‘Stamp’!”) (This unsolicited suggestion is offered to
our law enforcement community free of charge.
I simply request that you not to call our house anymore, soliciting money
for your police dogs. What do police
dogs need money for, anyway?)
As you can tell, I have an intense bee in my bonnet about
coincidences.
For me, coincidences are monumentally annoying, your mind
ablaze pondering the question, “How can that be?”, while waiting cerebral
concerns, urgent and otherwise, inevitably pay the price.
How can you think straight while in the throes of grappling
with a “coincidence”?
I just sighed.
“An expression of
frustration and an alerting signal to move things along.”
Okay.
“With your example of
a recent coincidence.”
I know where I am going with this.
“Well then for heaven’s sakes, go there!”
I’m going! I’m going!
I just sighed again.
Okay.
I have had this TV in my home office for, like, twenty-five
years. It’s an RCA, giving you some idea of its chronological vintage. One day, the TV suddenly stopped being in
color, its projected picture now showing exclusively in black-and-white.
Fine. It’s an ancient
TV; its demise is hardly unexpected. No
rush to replace it, however. I primarily
listen to the classical music channel on that TV while I’m working. So no imminent concern. Who cares if you listen to Mozart in
black-and-white?
Moving on with this scintillating scenario…
When our daughter and her husband purchase a new TV for
their house, they offer their relatively new superannuated TV to us, and we
appreciatively accept. The arranged plan
is to install the upgraded gift TV in our bedroom, relocating our current
bedroom
TV to my office, where it will replace my deteriorating RCA, now broadcasting exclusively in
black-and-white.
They arrive with the gift TV; we immediately play “Musical
Televisions.” The gift TV is duly installed
in our bedroom, our former bedroom TV is hooked up in my office, while the displaced
RCA sits redundantly on the carpet,
ready for donation to our “charity of choice”, Helping Hands for the Blind. Whose recipients will be minimally inconvenienced
by a TV, playing only in black-and-white.
I am really excited. Once
again, I have a fully functioning TV in my office. The device ready to go. We turn the replacement TV on.
It plays only in black-and-white.
Well, that was a
disappointment.
I immediately call the cable company. It’s simple logic. If two installed TV’s play only in
black-and-white, the problem’s the cable box in my office, not the two TVs,
malfunctioning in an identical fashion, right?
I mean, it only makes sense.
Three days later – between the hours of ten and twelve – the
company’s cable technician arrives. The
technician’s name is Manuel. He is
extremely capable.
For the first time in months, courtesy of Manuel’s technological
expertise, there is a chromatic picture emanating from the TV playing in my
office. Not content that all is now well
– and since a man who might well know the answer is standing in front of me – I
ask Manuel’s expert opinion concerning exactly what happened.
Though not one hundred percent certain, Manuel patiently
hypothesizes that my office’s original RCA
TV was indeed broken, and that the newly installed replacement TV was hooked up
incorrectly to the cable box.
To which my immediate response was,
“Really?”
Of all the various malfunctions a TV can succumb to, two
distinct and separate televisions presenting identical symptoms for two
entirely different reasons?
What a coincidence!
Another example, which I shall skeletalize for the sake of
brevity and minimal annoyance. For you, and
for me, having to listen to it again.
Having tested positive for a disrupting intestinal condition
for which I was successfully treated, a year or so later, the identical symptoms
return. Two days after the office-TV
mystification, a subsequent test for that intestinal condition comes back
negative.
Summing up for the confused and the incredulous, I am now
experiencing the same symptoms as I did for an intestinal condition a reliable
test reports I no longer have. (The
doctor told me, “Let me know if the condition returns.” I told him, “How will I know?”)
So there you have it.
A man supremely distressed by such occurrences experiences two bizarre
inexplicabilities virtually back-to-back.
Look at that.
Another coincidence.
2 comments:
Here's another coincidence. I was just reading about how it's good for you to eat a variety of colorful fruits and vegetables. That could be the answer to both problems.
Mathematically speaking, the occurrence of coincidences is highly likely. See "The Improbability Principle: Why Coincidences, Miracles, and Rare Events Happen Every Day" by David J. Hand.
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