#1

So one day on the bus from work, the driver anounced over the speakers, that since it was christmas and all she would like to advice us about a ticket control on the and a station 3 stops ahead.
About half the passangers rushed off on the next station.
As she started driving again she announced that there in fact was no control and thanked the rest of us for paying for tickets.
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#3

In an effort to retrieve the missing squirrels, they set up traps to capture the squirrels.
Later on the headlines:
"Huge Success: 38 squirrels out of 30 missing were captured.".
Cause-and-effect is not an abstract idea, there is actual research behind why a small action can have unintended ripple effects.
Sociologist Robert Merton’s study on unanticipated consequences can help explain why these everyday stories make so much sense.
He believes that actions often have results which are not anticipated by us, and the cause is mostly driven by factors such as ignorance, error or immediate self-interest.
For example, sometimes taking a wrong turn on the road or being late for work can actually save your life when you later find out that there has been an accident on your usual route.
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Some effects can be positive, but sometimes a small mistake can also lead to big setbacks — like oversleeping because your alarm did not go off, causing you to miss an important meeting.
Experts believe that even proper planning and assessing all kinds of risks cannot account for every possible outcome. There are always hidden variables and unpredictable paths, labeled as “unknown unknowns.”
For example, even when you leave your house at your usual time every day, a massive pile-up can block your route eventually delaying you at work.
These kinds of events are sometimes also referred to as “black swans” — events that are unpredictable “because they lie outside the realm of usual experience.”
#8

I saw her at the mall a year later with what I assume to be one of the other guys and a new born... poor sap.
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Karma for faking sick? Maybe. Did I do it again during high school? You betcha.
Some of these stories can also be explained through the chaos theory which says that even tiny causes can set off a chain reaction.
One of the popular examples is Play-Doh. Manufactured by a soap company in the 1930s, it was originally meant to clean coal dust off wallpaper. But kids turned it into a creative toy, eventually forcing the company to rework it. Now, it is being used by millions of children around the globe. The manufacturer probably imagined a hundred ways the material could be used, but never this.
The chaos theory basically reminds us to always expect the unexpected, even in simple or predictable situations. There are a lot of variables at play, it is impossible to fully know how things will turn out and also because, life is full of surprises.
#12

One moment, he stopped lecturing and said: "You! Throw out that chewing gum".
FOUR students stood up to do it.
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Turns out my parents already had plans that night so they didn't even get home until late. I still don't know if that cop showed up, however my friend saw an officer leave the development.
TL;DR ratted myself out for reckless driving to my parents before the police officer did. parents never came home.
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#20

**TLDR: My drunken jealousy saved me and my boyfriend from possibly getting burned during a party**.


