Like a Rushdie novel, events in my life are conspiring. Different spheres of ordinarily orthogonal experiences are colluding. And these incident-orbs are painting a picture for me. They are teaching me a life-lesson about The importance of Time. Or rather, Timing. This lesson in relativity and sequence illustrates the randomness of the dice falling a certain way.
First, Work. In my company, tens or hundreds of people exist with skills and experience similar to mine (sad thought, isn't that? Just another Brick in the Wall...). Yet, when my project manager was looking for people to staff in a London project, the Timing was such that every one of those people was busy while I was free. Through sheer Availability, I got to work across the Pond on the company's dime. Test drive working life in London.
Then, Relationships. Many months ago, I spoke to N on the phone. I was supposed to meet her, but the Timing was such that I met another girl first. Things did not work out with the other girl, I called up N, and the Timing was such that she had become Available recently as well. We got together and spent Time with each other. But the Timing was such that it did not work out. If we'd met a few years earlier, or a few months later, things could have been different...
And then, Career. My company is planning to expand in India and is looking for people to staff there. I knew about this earlier, but didn't care much about it. Now, the Timing is such that I could do with a change. So when they reached out to me last Friday, I might consider moving. But it would depend upon other factors like my relationships, parents, friends/financial ties - all related to Timing.
And finally, Vacation. I was planning to take Time off and visit Europe with my sister. But I was not staffed on a project yet, and could not take a break just 2 weeks within joining a project. Surprise - a project in London came along, starting at just the right Time. I planned it so that I could synchronize my customary US trip back with my Europe trips, and managed to kill two birds with one stone.
If the omniscient, omnipotent universe is hinting at something, I'm getting the subtle message. Events are random, information is imperfect, dependancies complex and unknown. If one wants a desired outcome, one should simply change the Timing, and try again.
As the great contemporary philosopher Aaliyah once carooned: "If at first you don't succeed, Dust yourself off and try again". Personally, I prefer Dilbert: "If at first you don't succeed, then destroy all evidence that you tried".