The Doctor Who episode "Turn Left" is built on the premise that in an alternate timeline the Doctor's companion Donna Noble chose to turn right instead of left at an intersection, the result of which created a butterfly effect causing the Doctor to be killed and civilization on Earth to crumble.
Although hopefully none of us have made decisions that will result in Armageddon and alien invasion, I'm sure we all have made "turn left"-style decisions that, in retrospect, could have changed our lives in ways good or bad.
As I look back, I can think of a few:
When I was a kid, I was climbing on the fence behind my grandfather's garage. I lost my balance and began to fall towards the neighbour's yard which was loaded with scrap wood and metal and nails sticking up. I reached blindly out and managed to grab a shingle on the garage roof by my finger tips and pulled myself back. Had I not managed this, I probably would have been FUBAR.
Another, less dangerous one, happened in Grade 9, my first year of high school (which go from 9-12 in my part of the world). A girl sent me a note asking me out. Problem was I couldn't decipher the girl's name. In retrospect it was the only time in high school a member of the opposite sex showed any interest in me. And as she never followed up she probably assumed I wasn't interested. Would my life have turned out different had I been able to read her handwriting?
One more: a few years back I was hired to work for a major organization (I won't get more specific). It was in some ways a bad hire due to the job not being well-defined. But above that I was also victim of a poor manager who conducted his "job performance reviews" based upon rumor and single newbie errors, often months after any issue arose. During one of these reviews he actually told me the results of another employee's review. I found out soon after that this was a MAJOR -- as in job-terminating, big-time fine, drummed out of the business -- privacy violation. When I was, inevitably, pink-slipped (with the same manager stating I was not fit for doing my chosen line of work), I had the phone in my hand, ready to blow the whistle on the guy. I didn't. My turn left quandary is - would I have been able to keep my job, or get a settlement, or at least get the satisfaction of seeing the putz fired. By not "turning left", within a couple months I was making double what my ex-employer had been paying me, in the same line of work he said I was unsuited for, and nearly a decade later I'm thriving while many of my colleagues at the nameless organization have since been laid off.
At the end of the day the only one of these three that I regret is the one with the girl (and if she'd been serious she'd have tried to contact me again anyway). But it's still an interesting bit of mental exercise to imagine what might have changed had you zigged instead of zagging. And of course those who study quantum physics believe that somewhere in the multiverse versions of me did break his neck, get a girlfriend in Grade 9, and sue his ex boss into oblivion.
What are your examples?
Alex
Although hopefully none of us have made decisions that will result in Armageddon and alien invasion, I'm sure we all have made "turn left"-style decisions that, in retrospect, could have changed our lives in ways good or bad.
As I look back, I can think of a few:
When I was a kid, I was climbing on the fence behind my grandfather's garage. I lost my balance and began to fall towards the neighbour's yard which was loaded with scrap wood and metal and nails sticking up. I reached blindly out and managed to grab a shingle on the garage roof by my finger tips and pulled myself back. Had I not managed this, I probably would have been FUBAR.
Another, less dangerous one, happened in Grade 9, my first year of high school (which go from 9-12 in my part of the world). A girl sent me a note asking me out. Problem was I couldn't decipher the girl's name. In retrospect it was the only time in high school a member of the opposite sex showed any interest in me. And as she never followed up she probably assumed I wasn't interested. Would my life have turned out different had I been able to read her handwriting?
One more: a few years back I was hired to work for a major organization (I won't get more specific). It was in some ways a bad hire due to the job not being well-defined. But above that I was also victim of a poor manager who conducted his "job performance reviews" based upon rumor and single newbie errors, often months after any issue arose. During one of these reviews he actually told me the results of another employee's review. I found out soon after that this was a MAJOR -- as in job-terminating, big-time fine, drummed out of the business -- privacy violation. When I was, inevitably, pink-slipped (with the same manager stating I was not fit for doing my chosen line of work), I had the phone in my hand, ready to blow the whistle on the guy. I didn't. My turn left quandary is - would I have been able to keep my job, or get a settlement, or at least get the satisfaction of seeing the putz fired. By not "turning left", within a couple months I was making double what my ex-employer had been paying me, in the same line of work he said I was unsuited for, and nearly a decade later I'm thriving while many of my colleagues at the nameless organization have since been laid off.
At the end of the day the only one of these three that I regret is the one with the girl (and if she'd been serious she'd have tried to contact me again anyway). But it's still an interesting bit of mental exercise to imagine what might have changed had you zigged instead of zagging. And of course those who study quantum physics believe that somewhere in the multiverse versions of me did break his neck, get a girlfriend in Grade 9, and sue his ex boss into oblivion.
What are your examples?
Alex