Sunday, March 22, 2009

360 Degrees: Knowing the Future

Recent events in my life have caused me to think about the value of being able to predict things. For me, the value would have been upwards of $3,000. My dad's office had a March Madness pool in which over 300 of his coworkers participated, at $10 a bracket. However, I am currently in a 43-way tie for 154th place and, barring an incredibly unlikely turn of events involving Dayton's victory over West Virginia being nullified (maybe due to some scandal involving preformance-enhancing drugs/academic ineligibility/cheating/bad officiating/an unfair advantage since the game was being played in Dayton) and West Virginia, after reentering the tournament, making it to the Elite Eight, I have no shot of winning. My only consolation is that I am crushing my dad, who is in an 18-way tie for 291st place (he had WVU making the Final Four).

After musing on my downfall, I started thinking about how great it would be to be able to predict the future. Not only would I be $3,000 richer, but I would also be a lot more certain about what decisions I should make and what ramifications my actions would have. What's more, I would be able to help other people by predicting bad things that might happen to them. This is kind of like a preview I saw for a movie that I don't remember the name of. Nicholas Cage is in it, and he plays a guy that can predict future disasters and tries to prevent them.

Though being able to predict the future seems cool, in reality it would totally suck. Instead of living in the present, I would be constantly preoccupied with what was going to happen. Just think about how much less fun the NCAA Tournament would be if you knew the outcomes of all the games beforehand. The spontenaiety, surprise, and unpredicabilitude is what I like most about it. In fact, those are the best things about life in general.

In conclusion, though it would be pretty awesome to be able to predict the future (not to mention helful), the many cons outweigh the pros, in my opinion. While it would be great to have my whole life mapped out and figured out in my mind, what makes life so intriguing is the endless possibilities and the unlimited potential of the future. I wouldn't give that up for anything, not even that $3,000.

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