Littlewood’s law of miracles is a calculated theory that describes how many times we will be able to encounter a miracle in a given period of time. The short version of this theory may be found on Wikipedia which is nicely written as follows: “Littlewood defines a miracle as an exceptional event of special significance occurring at a frequency of one in a million. He assumes that during the hours in which a human is awake and alert, a human will experience one event per second, which may be either exceptional or unexceptional (for instance, seeing the computer screen, the keyboard, the mouse, this article, etc.). Additionally, Littlewood supposes that a human is alert for about eight hours per day.
As a result a human will in 35 days have experienced under these suppositions about one million events. Accepting this definition of a miracle, one can be expected to observe one miraculous occurrence within the passing of every 35 consecutive days – and therefore, according to this reasoning, seemingly miraculous events are actually commonplace.” With Littlewood’s reasoning, we can conclude that on average, we will experience one miracle per month.
Having called for enormous waves, or being able to strike so many times may be more than one miracle, at the same time and to the same exact person. This may also be just a random occurrence of sequential events. Maybe those waves were also called for while they were chanting out loud. Perhaps I had hidden talents that I never knew. We never know how miracles will actually happen.
The interesting thing about miracles is that we tend to only remember the “hits” rather than all of the other “misses.” By “hits” I am trying to say when miracles actually do happen. For instance, people at casinos tend to rely on luck for their “hits” in winning money at slot machines. Because they only remember the times that they have won, they are forced to forget about all those times that they did not win; only looking forward to the eventual “hit” they are going to experience. It is quite interesting to see that because of the fact that we can only see the good things happening, we will forget about the bad things, in this case losing money, and pursue after the miracles. I believe that this type of mindset will lead people into dependence on miracles, which will help them continue in their journey of life.

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