TED Talks Daily - Is luck random — or can you cultivate it? | Christian Busch

Episode Date: March 17, 2026

When the 2025 Los Angeles wildfires destroyed his home and neighborhood, scientist Christian Busch encountered the opposite of serendipity: "zemblanity," or bad luck by design. Drawing on more than a ...decade of scientific research, he explores how people can navigate unpredictability by adopting a serendipity mindset that transforms setbacks into unexpected new beginnings. He asks: What if good luck isn't random but can actually be cultivated?Learn more about our flagship conference happening this April at attend.ted.com/podcast Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:03 You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day. I'm your host, Elise Hume. Can you imagine if your worst day ever became the case study for your life's work? On that day, I was about to submit a paper to a major conference, and like a rookie, I had left it to the last hour and was stuck in the uploading queue. That's when the evacuation order came in for the LA wildfires and Pacific Pallisades where we lived. I found myself outside, hosing down the house with one hand and holding the laptop with the other, desperately trying to get that document to upload.
Starting point is 00:00:40 At that point, I thought that was my biggest problem. That was Christian Bush, a researcher and management scientist who has spent his professional life studying serendipity, luck, and innovation. It all felt like really bad luck. But when I reflected on it, I realized it was more than that. He argues that while we can't control unexpected events, we can train ourselves to spot hidden opportunities in them and develop the skill and awareness
Starting point is 00:01:06 to turn chaos into connection, discovery, or even a door to a whole new chapter. That's coming up right after a short break. And now our TED Talk of the Day. On January 7th, 2025, our house, my wife's parents' house, and most of our neighborhood burned down to the ground. On that day, I was about to submit a paper to a major management conference,
Starting point is 00:01:42 And like a rookie, I had left it to the last hour and was stuck in the uploading queue. That's when the evacuation order came in for the LA wildfires and Pacific Pellisades where we lived. I found myself outside, hosing down the house with one hand and holding the laptop with the other, desperately trying to get that document to upload. At that point, I thought that was my biggest problem.
Starting point is 00:02:04 Turns out it wasn't. The document did upload. The hosing, however, did not work. And 24 hours later, our house was gone. I'll never forget the firefighting planes flying so low overhead as we evacuated. It felt like a really bad Hollywood movie. My wife was pumping breast milk as we're trying to get our newborn to safety and our toddler from preschool.
Starting point is 00:02:26 That night in the hotel, as we tried to act as normal as possible towards the kid, my then-three-year-old daughter looked up and said, I want to go home. You know, I've researched taught and worked on the unexpected for over a decade, and I've seen a fair share of unexpected events myself. But this hit on a whole new level. In the days that followed, I tried to focus on the things that I could control. And surprisingly, there were micro-moments of joy,
Starting point is 00:02:52 like unexpectedly bumping into old friends in the hotel that we evacuated to. And that experience was an unexpected and certainly not wished for opportunity to practice the very serendivity mindset framework that I had been working on and that can help us navigate those kind of situations. More on that later, but first let's talk about bad luck. It all felt like really bad luck. But when I reflected on it, I realized it was more than that. It was Zemplenity.
Starting point is 00:03:21 Zemblenity is when something unlucky, unwanted, or undesired happens by design, because it's already built in. It seems unexpected and like bad luck, but in hindsight it was to be expected and avoidable. In our case, the wildfires and the winds were the trigger, but the real misfortune was already built into the fragile system all around us. There was a lack of water in the water reservoirs and the hydrants,
Starting point is 00:03:49 a limited pre-deployment of fire trucks in the area despite the early warnings, brush wasn't cleared in the area, and a complete lack of coordination. It wasn't just one thing. In retrospect, we realized that it was a space of infinite negative possibilities where eventually misfortune was inevitable. The thing is, even when you try to do the right thing, in the system around you, Zemblendy, can still be baked in, and you get caught up in it.
Starting point is 00:04:17 What happened to us wasn't just bad luck. It was a pattern that I've seen everywhere, from wildfires to boardrooms to living rooms. The thing about Zemplenity is it's not just out there in big systems, like in the wildfire case. We see the same in companies with toxic corporate cultures, where it's just a matter of time that disaster strikes, and sometimes even in our own minds.
Starting point is 00:04:37 minds. Semblenity is when we create our own bad luck. Take the traveler who leaves for the airport with exactly the time it's needed to get to the airport. Any small, unexpected thing like a minor traffic jam, and suddenly the flight is missed. Or take the old man who is told to use his walking stick. He doesn't. One day he unexpectedly falls down the stairs. It might seem surprising in the moment, but it was to be expected. Semblenity sees. It seems like bad luck, but it's already built in all along. Now, before I go deeper into this, I want to ask you a question. In the room, those of you, who of you considers yourself to be a lucky person?
Starting point is 00:05:19 Please raise your hands. And at home, a mental hand-raise works too. Okay, quite the lucky room, actually. Well done. That was great energy. No worries, I won't ask the unlucky ones. We'll focus on the lucky ones for now. Those of you now who said you consider yourself to be a lucky person,
Starting point is 00:05:36 Who of you thinks they had some sort of role in it? Please put all modesty aside. Who thinks, hands up, had some sort of role in it? Okay, still quite a few. All right, so that's interesting, right? That on one hand, we know that luck is random, but on the other hand, already Louis Pasteur told us that it may favor the prepared mind. In order to visualize this, let's look at the luck matrix.
Starting point is 00:05:56 The luck matrix shows us the four different types of luck. Here on the lower left, we see bad luck. Bad luck is something negative, unexpected. expected that happens to us. It happens to us. You can never blame anyone for bad luck, and it creates a lot of societal inequality. Good luck here on the lower right is something positive. It happens to us. We didn't work for it. Just great if it happens. Zemblanity is the misfortune by design that we build into fragile systems or into the pattern and habits that kind of then ultimately lead us to disaster. And then the thing that has driven our research for the last decade is
Starting point is 00:06:34 serendipity. Serendipity is the active luck that depends on how we engage with the unexpected. Blind luck happens to us, and active luck serendipity can be cultivated. Imagine you have erratic handmovements like I do, then you spill a lot of coffee. So imagine you accidentally spill coffee over the person next to you. That person looks at you slightly annoyedly, but you sense there might be something there. You don't know what it is? You just think, oh, that could be an interesting person. And now you have a couple of options, right? One option is. to just say, I'm so sorry, you walk outside and you think, ah, what could have happened? Another option is you start that conversation and that person becomes the love of your life
Starting point is 00:07:14 or your co-founder or you name it. The point is the eventual outcome, good or bad, depends on how we engage with the unexpected. And that's where serendipity emerges. Serendipity really has this unexpected good luck that results from unplanned moments in which our actions lead to positive outcomes. Let's look at an example. In 1968, Spencer Silver was trying to develop a stronger glue. Accidentally, he developed a weaker one. Seemed useless in the moment.
Starting point is 00:07:45 Until a couple of years later, his colleague, Arthur Fry, was using that weak glue to avoid having his bookmarks falling out of his church hymnal. That seemed quite useful. The Post-it-knot was born and became one of three M's major products. Lots of examples out there of serendipity, right? From Velcro to microwave ovens, to how people unexpectedly find love or their apartments.
Starting point is 00:08:09 And a lot of times also when crises becomes the inflection point for something in one's own life. The point is that over the last decade, we've studied serendipity, all these different stories of serendipity, and try to understand, is there a pattern behind that? And turns out there is. It's always the same process.
Starting point is 00:08:27 There is an unexpected serendipity trigger, which is random. So the coffee spill or the weak glue, but then we have to imbue meaning in it. We have to connect the dots, we have to see what could be in that moment, and then we have to materialize it, right? It's not enough to just think, oh, this could be the love of my life. You gotta actually go on dates, right?
Starting point is 00:08:47 And so the point is once we look at it as a process, we can influence it. We can first learn how to see more serendipity triggers, to try to focus on what is the information hidden in this good or bad luck moment. You know, for example, asking in weekly meetings, what surprised you last week? Very simple question, but then people start to focus on,
Starting point is 00:09:07 is there some information in this kind of unexpected event that is just being happening here? Second, we can learn how to seed more serendipity triggers, and I'm not suggesting you spill more coffee. There's other ways. One of which is, at an event like this today, to put some rich information points out there, right? When someone asks the dreaded,
Starting point is 00:09:26 so what do you do, question? Saying something like, hey, I'm Christian. I study serendipity, but what I'm really curious about is parenting because our four-year-old just learned how to negotiate. And so what I'm doing here is I'm giving you a couple of potential connection points where you could be like, oh my God, such a coincidence, our kid also X well. The point is instead of having a pitch that's unidimensional, it's giving multidimensionality and potential dots that other people can connect for us.
Starting point is 00:09:53 Then third, we can learn how to better connect the dots. For example, asking ourselves in unexpected moments, can I still find something? some meaning in this. And then last but not least, we can also learn how to act more on it, because that's where we miss serendipity very often. Think back in your life to moments where you saw an unexpected opportunity in the moment, but you didn't act on it. So maybe it was the unexpected idea in a meeting that you didn't bring into the meeting.
Starting point is 00:10:20 Or you were flirting with a person on the bus when you were still single, of course, but you were flirting with that person on the bus and you didn't speak with them. And then you walked outside and think, what could have happened had I? And there's a lot of reasons what holds us back in those moments, right? But one of the major reasons is fear of rejection, right? So in my case, for example, my brain immediately goes to, what's the worst thing that can happen if I do this, the sting of rejection.
Starting point is 00:10:47 One thing I've realized, though, and our research shows, is that actually once you start to realize that that is not the real worst case, that the real worst case is the regret of not having tried, that feeling of walking outside and thinking, ah, what could have happened? And so what can be really useful is this idea of reframing away from what's the risk of doing this to what's actually the risk of not doing it? And then we realize the risk of not doing it
Starting point is 00:11:15 is a lot of times much higher than the risk of doing it. So it gives us a bias for action. Now, why is this serendipity mindset, this capacity to turn the unexpected into positive output, comes so important. Well, because the unexpected is everywhere. Whether we see it or not, and whether we like it or not. The likelihood of one specific unexpected event happening is very low.
Starting point is 00:11:39 It's very unlikely that the lady here yells at me or the gentleman here throws a peach at me, right? That's very, I hope that's unlikely. I mean, you never know. But it's very unlikely in itself. But when you add up all the possible unexpected things, that could happen, all these infinite, unexpected things that could happen out there, it actually becomes quite likely that something unexpected happens. And that's quite scary to me as a German, right? We love planning, we love having a strategy and straight lines, and then life is a little bit more
Starting point is 00:12:12 like a squiggle, right, where unexpected events come from everywhere. And so we have to build a muscle for that. And that is true for good luck, but it's also true for bad luck, right? The same alertness to our surroundings, the ability to connect our dots that helps us nurture serendipity can also help us guard against the impacts of simplicity. And of course, mindset is not a cure-all, right? Our research also shows that things like education, networks, safety nets play a huge role when it comes to opportunity spaces. But on the individual level, for what is at our disposal, mindset is one of the most effective tools we have to nurture serendipity and guard against semblety. It's not toxic positivity.
Starting point is 00:12:52 It's not ignoring pain. It's not ignoring grief. It's accepting it. It's working with it. And then saying, what can I still control now? What can I still focus on now? And, you know, in our case, there was a lot of pain around losing our house, right? And that doesn't really go away that quickly.
Starting point is 00:13:09 I still wake up in the morning and think, how can that happen? But alongside it, something unexpected happen. It sparked new research. It gave me a renewed sense of purpose. and it rallied a community around us. I'm far closer now with my in-laws, with whom we spend much more time. And so out of the ashes,
Starting point is 00:13:27 something new is beginning to grow. Victor Frankel, who has been a great inspiration to me, once said that everything can be taken from a human but one thing, the last of the human freedoms, to choose one's attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one's own way. And I believe that's very true. We can't pick the fires, the storms, the crises,
Starting point is 00:13:49 but we can't choose how we meet them. And then that choice is where serendipity begins as the unexpected starting point for a new chapter and potentially a whole new book. My hope is that we start building a world that is designing more for serendipity and guards against simplicity. And the next time something unexpected happens to you,
Starting point is 00:14:11 may serendipity be with you. Thank you. That was Christian Bush at TED at BCG in Dubai in 2025. If you're curious about TED's curation, find out more at TED.com slash curation guidelines. And that's it for today. TED Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective. This talk was fact-checked by the TED Research Team and produced and edited by our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green, Lucy Little, and Tonica Sung Marnivong. This episode was mixed by Lucy Little.
Starting point is 00:14:47 Additional support from Emma Tobner and Daniela Ballerazo. I'm Elise Hu. I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feet. Thanks for listening.

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