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You were born in a country of one billion people, in a decade when half the households had no running water, to parents who had enough to feed you. Already the odds were narrowing.
You were born male in a place where that still mattered. You were born without the genetic errors that kill children before they learn to speak. You were born into a family that valued education in a country where most families could not afford it. You were born with a brain that could hold abstract thought, in a body that did not fight you, in a time when the barriers to learning were starting to fall.
Any one of these could have been otherwise. You could have been born twenty years earlier, or two hundred kilometers west, or into the family next door where the father drank and the money ran out and school was a luxury no one could justify. You could have been born with the same parents but a different roll of the genetic dice — the mutation that stops the heart, the chromosome that reshapes the brain, the allergy that closes the throat.
But you were not. You are here. In this exact configuration of matter and circumstance that allows you to read these words.
The house you woke up in this morning exists because a hundred decisions went a particular way. Because your father found work. Because you found work. Because the business did not collapse in the years when it could have collapsed. Because you learned to code in the decade when learning to code could still change a life. Because you kept going on the days when stopping would have been easier.
There are a thousand versions of your life where the house does not exist. Where the money ran out. Where the opportunity closed before you reached it. Where the illness came sooner, or the accident happened, or the decision went the other way and everything that followed went differently.
But in this version — this one narrow thread pulled from the infinite fabric of what could have been — the house is here. The walls are standing. The roof is solid. Your father is upstairs. Your children are asleep in their beds. Your wife is here. You are here.
The park you walked through this morning has been there for decades, but you could easily have lived in the part of the city where there is no park. Where the morning walk is traffic and horns and nowhere green to step. You could have been born in the village where your grandparents were born, where the nearest park is a day’s travel and the morning walk is to the well.
But you are not there. You are here. Where the path is paved and the trees are old and the ants make their line across the stone while you step around them.
The daughter who speaks with confidence, who knows her mind, who does not shrink — she exists because of ten thousand small choices you and your wife made and also because of the things you did not have to choose. The country she was born in. The decade. The access to schools that teach girls the same as boys. The absence of the hundred things that could have gone wrong in the pregnancy, in the birth, in the fragile first years when a fever can take a child and leave a family shattered.
She is here. Walking around with her whole life ahead of her. And the odds of her being exactly who she is, in this house, with these parents, in this moment — the odds are so small they are almost zero. But almost zero is not zero. And she is here.
The son learning to hold things in his small hands — his hands exist because a particular sperm met a particular egg on a particular night and every cell division after that went according to plan. No trisomy. No deletion. No mutation in the genes that build fingers. He has ten of them. They work. He is learning to use them. And that entire sequence of cellular miracles had to go exactly right or he would not be here, or he would be here but different, or he would be here but struggling in ways that break a parent’s heart to witness.
But he is not struggling. He is here. Learning. Growing. Holding things. Calling for you. Existing in a body that works.
Your wife is still here. You have been married long enough to know that marriages end. You have seen them end. You know couples who started with more certainty than you did and still could not hold it together. The affair. The drift. The slow accumulation of resentments that eventually outweigh the reasons to stay.
But your marriage has not ended. It is still here. Not perfect. Not easy. But here. And that is not inevitable. That is the result of a thousand small moments where either of you could have chosen differently and did not. The morning you saw her clearly. The night you reached across the space instead of turning away. The choice made again when making it again was harder than walking out.
The systems that earn while you sleep exist because you learned a skill in the years when that skill was becoming valuable. Ten years earlier and the internet is not ready. Ten years later and the market is crowded. But you learned it when you learned it. You built what you built. And now the systems run and the money comes and you have choices that most people do not have.
This is not virtue. This is timing and chance and the accident of being born when you were born with the brain you were born with in the place where those things could combine into something that pays.
But it did combine. You are standing in the result.
The body that carried the weight this morning is the same body that could have been born with the heart defect, the bad knees, the autoimmune disorder that makes every morning a negotiation with pain. You know people living in those bodies. You have seen what it costs them just to get out of bed.
But you are not in that body. You are in this one. The one that still works. The one that says yes when you ask it to walk. The one that has not yet betrayed you in the ways bodies eventually betray everyone.
This will not last. The body will fail. The systems will break. The people will leave or die. The house will empty. The odds that brought you here do not promise you will stay.
But you are here now. This morning. In this body. In this house. With these people. Doing this work. And the sheer improbability of all of it should take your breath away.
A different century and you die of an infected cut. A different country and you never learn to read. A different family and there is no money for the computer that taught you to code. A different chromosome and your brain does not work the way it works. A different night and your children are not your children. A different choice and your wife is not your wife.
But it is this century. This country. This family. This brain. This night. This wife. These children.
The thread you are walking is so narrow. The margin between this life and all the other lives you did not get is so thin. And yet here you are. Still on the thread. Still walking.
The morning happened. The ground held. The breath came. The people were here. The work was possible.
None of it had to be. All of it is.