Saturday, 20 June 2026

Read — 5 min · morning and night

The sperm that became you outswam two hundred and fifty million others. Not because it was the strongest — because it happened to be aimed in the right direction when the chemistry allowed it. One cell, barely visible, carrying half the code. Meeting another cell carrying the other half. If either had been delayed by a millisecond, you would not exist. Someone else would be here instead, reading different words, living a different life. But the timing aligned. The membrane opened. The nuclei fused. And the particular combination that would become this body, this mind, these hands — it began.

Your parents met. Not inevitably. Not because fate demanded it. They were in the same city at the same time because of ten thousand prior choices — jobs taken, buses caught, friends made, invitations accepted. If your father had missed that one introduction. If your mother had chosen a different university. If either had married someone else, which they both nearly did. The odds against their meeting were already astronomical. The odds of them meeting and choosing each other — narrower still. And yet they did. And here you are, the consequence of their improbable convergence.

Your grandparents survived. All four of them lived long enough to have children. This is not a given. Your father’s mother could have died in childbirth, which happened to one in fifty women in her generation. Your mother’s father could have been killed in any of the dozen ways men died young in his time and place. But they survived. They survived long enough to meet their own improbable partners. They survived long enough to raise children who survived. Four lines converging. Eight great-grandparents before them. Sixteen before them. Go back ten generations and you have over a thousand direct ancestors, every single one of whom survived childhood, survived disease, survived long enough to reproduce. One death anywhere in that chain and you are not here.

The house you live in was built by people whose names you do not know. They poured the foundation. They raised the walls. They connected the pipes that bring water to your tap, the wires that bring power to your lights. They finished the work and moved on to other projects and eventually they died, and the house remained. You live inside the product of their labor. Every room is held up by their hands. This building that shelters your father, your wife, your children — it exists because someone else did work they will never be thanked for.

Your daughter could have been born with any number of conditions that would have made her life harder. Chromosomal disorders. Congenital defects. The thousand small errors that occur during cell division and usually, quietly, end a pregnancy before it is noticed. But the cells divided correctly. The organs formed in the right places. The heart started beating at the right moment. She was born whole and breathing, and every day since then her body has continued the work of being a body without major malfunction. This is not guaranteed. This is not owed. This is chance operating in your favor.

Your son’s small hands learning to hold things — the fact that he has hands at all, that the genes expressed correctly, that the limbs budded and grew and articulated into fingers. The probability of any particular feature forming correctly is high, but not certain. The probability of every feature forming correctly in sequence — lower. And yet here he is. Ten fingers. Two eyes. A brain that is learning language, learning cause and effect, learning that reaching for something brings it closer. The machinery of a human child, assembled from scratch in nine months, now running its programs and getting better at being human every day.

The morning park is there because someone decided not to pave it. In another version of the city’s history, that land became a parking lot, a mall, a housing complex. But a different decision was made. Trees were planted instead of removed. Paths were laid. The land was designated for walking, for birds, for the small dramas of ants crossing open ground. You benefit from a choice made by people you will never meet, in a meeting you were not part of, decades before you moved to this neighborhood.

The systems you built that earn while you sleep — they exist because you were born into a time when such systems are possible. Fifty years earlier, there were no computers. A hundred years earlier, there was no electricity in homes. Two hundred years earlier, the idea of automated income would have been incomprehensible. You were born into the narrow slice of history where the tools exist, where the infrastructure exists, where the knowledge is accessible. You did not create the conditions. You are using them. The timing is not your doing.

Your father is still upstairs. He is old enough now that this is not guaranteed for much longer. Every meal together is borrowed time. His heart is still beating. His mind is still clear. He is still the person who knows the old stories, who remembers the shape of your childhood, who can tell you what you were like before you remember being like anything. He is still here. One day he will not be. But today he is. The meal will happen. The inheritance of his presence continues.

Your wife carried what only she could carry. The pregnancies happened in her body, not yours. The risk was hers. The nausea, the exhaustion, the changes that do not fully reverse — all hers. She could have chosen not to. Many women do. But she chose it twice. She carried your children into the world and now they are here, walking and talking and becoming themselves, and this would not have happened without her willingness to let it happen inside her. You benefit from her yes.

The body you woke up in could have been different. You could have been born with a chronic condition, a disability, a body that required constant intervention just to function. You were not. You were born with a body that mostly works, that can walk without pain, that can see and hear and move through space without assistance. This is not virtue. This is not earned. This is the luck of the genetic draw. You did not choose your baseline. You inherited it.

The legs that will carry you to the park — they exist because a fish three hundred and seventy-five million years ago developed bony fins that could support weight on land. Because that fish’s descendants did not all die in the next extinction event. Because the line continued, adapting, branching, surviving through ice ages and droughts and the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs. Every ancestor in that line lived long enough to reproduce. Billions of years of survival, of not-dying, of the dice landing in your favor again and again and again. And the result is: you have legs. You can walk.

You are reading this because your eyes work, because you were taught to read, because you were born in a place and time where literacy is common. None of that is universal. None of that is guaranteed. The language you are reading was shaped by a thousand years of linguistic drift. The alphabet was invented. The printing press was invented. The screen you are reading from was invented. You are standing at the end of a long chain of human ingenuity, using tools you did not make, reading words in a language you did not invent, thinking thoughts that are only possible because other people built the infrastructure of language and meaning.

You exist. Not as an inevitability. Not as destiny. You exist because a specific sperm met a specific egg at a specific moment, because your ancestors survived, because your parents met, because a thousand small chances broke in the direction of your eventual existence. The odds against you being here, as you, in this body, in this house, with these people — the odds are so high they are almost meaningless. And yet here you are. Breathing. Walking. Holding your son. Sitting across from your father. Living a life that was never guaranteed.

The improbability of it does not make it fragile. It is here. It is real. It is yours. But it is worth remembering, just once, how unlikely all of it is.