No matter what happened to a certain gold miner he always described it as pure luck. It was a particularly bitter winter. He was nearly freezing to death, but he kept digging for gold in the granite-like ground. Finally, as the Earth thawed in the Spring and he was down to his last meager ration of food, he broke through the hard crust and dug and dug until at last he hit a box. Inside the box was a carton of canned food left behind by some earlier miner. "Boy am I lucky." he said, "it could have been gold."
We like to describe ourselves as self-made men and women. We like to take credit for our accomplishments. We like to be rewarded for our sacrifices and hard work. It is difficult for us to admit there are some things in life over which we have no control.
Some of them are very basic. We could not choose our parents. We could not choose the country in which we were born. We could not choose the color of our skin or our native language. We could not choose the pre-natal care we had or the quality of our teachers.
Some of us "self-made people" started life with an enormous advantage. Now that we are adults, though, we can choose. We can set goals, chart courses, work hard, persevere. Still, there is a margin of life that does not yield to our control.
We speak of being in the "right place at the right time," or perhaps the "wrong place at the wrong time."
A couple happened to be sitting in a restaurant in New York City. They overheard two Wall Street types discussing a certain stock that was about to sky-rocket in value. The couple rushed to the bank, withdrew their savings and invested in that stock. It was a risky venture. They could have lost everything. They were what we call "lucky." The stock tripled in value in a relatively short time and they made a killing.
A ball player, playing on natural turf, is set to field a routine ground ball. The ball strikes a small clod of clay and skips off the player's glove. A run scores. Through no fault of the player, the game is lost. He's the goat. Wrong place, wrong time.