Our Companion, 'Chance'
(Image source: flickr.com) A traveller in a passing train waved at a child. The child stood in the courtyard of a house close to the rail line. The child waved back and smiled. It is a light-hearted moment of a chance encounter. How many chance encounters do we have with other people, and how many planned ones? If we count them, what will be the percentage of each? The odds are that ‘planned’ stands little chance. Obviously, ‘chance’ weighs much more than ‘planned’. Yet, we all go about our lives assuming everything is planned and neatly in place. We plan everything years and decades ahead. The mind is a slave to this perceived reality. We have no rational or independent mind as we believe. We see everything through this perceived reality and imagine it is the real view. Accepting the role of chance could lead to positive or negative existentialism. You might feel that you have no control, but you could see 'chance' as an opportunity for innovation, improvi...