You are special. You are infinitely, unbelievably, once-in-a-septillion-years special. That’s right, I’m talking to you, one of the nine-point-two people reading this.
You might not realize your specialness. You might not believe you are unique. You might think I am full of a plentiful substance common to barnyards and hog pens. You might think you are merely ordinary. But you’re not. You, my friend, are a regular freak of statistics. This is a fact.
Right now, there are 7.8 billion humans on the planet. The total number of humans alive right now represents 7 percent of the total number of humans who have ever lived—which is 117 billion humans. All these people, past and present, have one thing in common.
They ain’t you.
Nobody has ever been you. Nobody ever will be you again. Nobody will ever have your specific list of traits, talents, and body odor.
This is not some weird new-age schtick. I am speaking mathematically, you are an isolated occurrence. You are an arithmetical rarity so improbable that statisticians still have not figured
out how you happened.
Science tells us that the likelihood of you being born was nothing short of an impossibility. We’re talking about nanoscopic odds here.
To illustrate your uniqueness, I will use the illustration of a rock and a fish:
Imagine the entire globe covered in ocean. No land. Just water. Now imagine only one fish swimming in this ocean. Let’s call this fish “Angie” because Angie Broginez is the name of the saintly teacher who struggled unsuccessfully to teach me Algebra I.
Now let’s imagine that someone standing in a random spot on the globe throws a rock into this ocean. Got it?
Now, tell me, mathematically, what are the odds that this rock will land on Earth’s only fish?
I’ll tell you what the odds are: non-existent.
It can’t happen. It’s virtually impossible. Still, no matter how unlikely this…