Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

People Break Down The Most Statistically Improbable Things That Have Ever Happened To Them

Reddit user yankeevandal asked: 'What statistically improbable thing happened to you?'

We've all heard something that sounded so outrageous or unlikely that we struggled to believe it.

But in some cases, we might be the ones trying to find the words to tell an unbelievably true story.


Redditor yankeevandal asked:

"What statistically improbable thing happened to you?"

Hello Again, Stranger

"When I was a teenager, I picked up a hitchhiker, and then a few years later, the same guy picked me up when I was walking after I ran out of gas."

"I never saw him before or after those two occasions."

- Perrin_Aybara_PL

Countdown Diagnosis

"I first got cancer in 1993."

"In 2003, they told me to get my affairs in order, and that I had six months."

"In 2021, they told me it's spread to my bones and lungs. They gave me five years."

"In 2023, two years down, and I'm feeling about 90%"

- fabyooluss

"Godd**n, you're my hero today. It seemed like a bad thing, you getting cancer. But think about how cancer feels, getting someone tough like you! Keep truckin' you tough fighter!"

- KevinTheSeaPickle

A Bird Magnet

"I got attacked by a robin in the morning and then attacked by a hawk three hours later."

"That was a weird day."

- BlackberryNeon

Beating Foster Care Statistics

"I got a degree after aging out of foster care."

- joylm

"I’m proud of you!"

- emrey220

"Oh, this is amazing! Way to beat the odds, so happy for you!"

- Lizard_CEO

Truly a Series of Unfortunate Events

"Many years ago, I had a terrible day when my then-girlfriend broke up with me, then I did terribly in a final exam for a college class, and then I lost my wallet."

"And finally, as I was doing the Charlie Brown sad walk back home, some random branch broke off a tree as I was walking on the sidewalk underneath it, and the d**n thing fell on top of me, hit me square across the shoulder, and knocked me to the ground."

"I just burst out laughing because it was so ridiculous."

- Tough_Stretch

"This triggered an old memory from my uni days: I woke up one morning and a series of small things went wrong (think spills, broken dishes, burned clothes while ironing, corrupted assignment file on my laptop, that sort of thing, one after the other, all morning)."

"As I was leaving my hall of residence to head to my first class, I tripped and fell on the stairs. That was the last straw."

"I turned around, went back to my room, got back into bed, and stayed there for the rest of that bad luck day."

- mystyz

One with the Squirrels

"I have been hit in the head by live squirrels three times in my life, each on separate occasions."

- AdjunctAngel

A Surgery Gone Wrong

"I underwent a surgical procedure called a Stapedectomy to improve the significant hearing loss in my GOOD ear."

"Instead, I ended up completely deaf. My surgical ENT said this has only happened to five patients IN THE ENTIRE US. (He was doing research to try to help me after.) I don't know how true it is, but hey, lucky me."

- Glittering-Star2662

When Anything Can Be a Bookmark

"My husband and I visited our old hometown and went to a used book store we used to frequent."

"I picked up a familiar title in nostalgia and flipped it open to find a school student’s ID card."

"The name and photo on the ID?"

"My husband."

"As it turns out, his mom had donated books to that store many years before we all moved away from that area. He must have been using it as a bookmark and forgotten."

"It’s not so surprising considering we used to live in that area, but the ID was nearly 10 years old by the time we found it."

"That book was sitting on the shelf for nearly a decade untouched, waiting for me to come along and pick it up. Bizarre."

- misshepburn15

A Book Finally Returned Home

"A friend of mine, A, had a signed copy of a book from his favorite author."

"While he was at university, his mother asked him if she could donate his books and he said okay. He had forgotten that the book was in his room. He thought he had it with him at school."

"When he realized his mistake, the book was long gone."

"More than twenty years later, another friend, B, was in Japan. He was in a cafe that had a book exchange. He picked up a book that had an inscription. It was dedicated to someone with the same first name as our friend who had lost his inscribed book."

"B decided to buy it for A not knowing that A had lost an inscribed book from the now-dead author."

"B sent the book to A in the US. A was quite surprised to get a package from B who he hadn’t heard from in years. He was even more surprised when it was the exact same book his mother had donated. It was still in pretty good condition and even had notes in his handwriting in the margins that he didn’t remember making."

- whittlingcanbefatal

Meant to Have It

"After losing an AirPod while skiing, I was able to find it on the next run."

- BrickOutside1740

When One Door Closes

"Not an exciting life or death incident, but something rather sweet:"

"I took care of my late father for the final two years of his life. He had Alzheimer’s and pulmonary fibrosis, among other issues, so we had a lot more bad days than good. In the summer of 2019, I took my dad out for a 'date' one day to a historic old drugstore that has phenomenal milkshakes (one of his favorite foods in the world)."

"It was one of Dad’s increasingly rare good days, where he chatted merrily with me about all sorts of old memories. I felt like I had my dad’s former self back for just a little while. We had such a wonderful time that I intended to take him there again soon."

"However, this ended up being our last 'date.'"

"For most of the remainder of that year, Dad declined too much (mentally and physically) for me to take him out for anything other than very short grocery trips or to appointments. The following year came the pandemic. It was a very, very rough year with Dad."

"In January of 2021, my father died, alone, in a hospital in another state (our state ran out of hospital beds and he had suffered a traumatic fall that required hospitalization). That day in 2019 ended up being the last truly happy day I had with my Dad and the last fun outing he ever got to experience."

"Three months after my dad died, I met a wonderful man online (nine days after signing up for a one-year membership, because 'surely it’s going to take time to find someone truly compatible with a shy nerd like me!')"

"A few months later, we decided to try a first date. He lived three hours away but wanted me to be comfortable, so he volunteered to drive to my town for the date. He looked online for an appealing restaurant to suggest and excitedly told me about this really neat historic drugstore we could go to..."

"We went on a very crowded day (local festival; oops) and had to wait quite a while for a table. The waitress sat us at the EXACT same table where I sat with my dad nearly two years earlier! I was even in the same seat."

"Three months later, we got engaged at that drugstore."

"So the beginning of the end of one chapter of my life crossed paths with the beginning of the best (so far) chapters. My husband and I have since decided to make a trip back there at least once a year. Dad really would have loved my husband."

- Used-Toe-6374

Funny Seeing You Here

"Not me, but a friend. He was a merchant mariner. He lived here in Virginia Beach. He was always calling and texting, posting pics from around the world."

"One time he'd been out a while. We knew he was heading to Dubai, but didn't know where he'd be after that. Four months went by and nobody had heard from him."

"His neighbor, who I was friends with, got married and went to Thailand for his honeymoon. He texted me one day and said, 'You aren't gonna believe this s**t.'"

"He said he asked a local where a good local spot to eat was that tourists wouldn't be at. The guy took him 30 minutes from the beach to some dive bar/restaurant with no sign, and no clearly marked entrance. He said it looked so shady, he was afraid he was about to be robbed and killed."

"But he went in, and it was a legitimate restaurant. He ate, drank some beers, and went to the bathroom."

"As he went in, out walked my friend, so he took a pic and sent it to me to confirm he was okay."

"Imagine taking a flight several thousands of miles away, getting away from the tourist areas and going into a local dive bar, and running into your f**king next-door neighbor you haven't seen in months. S**t's wild."

- AngryChefNate

Short Waiting Lists

"I received my heart transplant after being on the list for only seven hours."

- dekion101

"I had a friend of a friend in New York who needed an organ transplant. The doctor evidently told her, 'You’ll be waiting for a year here. Go to Florida. They have no helmet laws and year-round sun.'"

"She moved down and had a new liver in a few weeks."

- Rubberbabybuggybum

Monochorionic Twins

​"My friend had two sets of monochorionic-monoamniotic twins (the rarest kind of twins) in back-to-back pregnancies."

"They're identical twins that share the same amniotic sac and same placenta."

"'Mono-Mono' or 'MoMo' twins happen in about one percent of identical twin pregnancies, and less than 0.1 percent of all pregnancies."

- fuawont

Some things are so hard to believe, but it's amazing to hear stories like these being told, especially when what happened leaves the person feeling happier than they were beforehand.

More from Trending/best-of-reddit

Reese Witherspoon
@reesewitherspoon/TikTok

Reese Witherspoon Shares Important Warning After Scammers Pretending To Be Her Message Fans

Though she is far from the first, Reese Witherspoon is among the latest celebrities verified with a blue checkmark on TikTok, with dozens, if not hundreds, of impersonator accounts scamming fans.

Witherspoon became aware of fake accounts imitating her identity and stealing her videos on Instagram and TikTok. These accounts would then reach out to Witherspoon's followers on the two platforms and message them, asking them for personal and financial information, and ask them for money.

Keep ReadingShow less
Piers Morgan; Donald Trump
Amal Alhasan/Getty Images for GEA; Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Piers Morgan 'Blames Trump' After Needing His Hip Replaced Following Painful Accident At London Restaurant

There's no shortage of things to blame Donald Trump for these days, including hip fractures, if you're British broadcaster Piers Morgan, at least.

Morgan recently posted on X after taking a fall in a London restaurant and fracturing his hip so badly he had to get it replaced.

Keep ReadingShow less
Jameela Jamil
JC Olivera/Variety via Getty Images

Jameela Jamil Explains Why She Isn't 'Brave' For Speaking Out On Social Issues—And Fans Are Nodding Hard

Since actor and TV presenter Jameela Jamil joined the Hollywood spotlight with her breakout role in The Good Place, she's established herself as an outspoken advocate for social justice.

Sometimes her commentary is well received and sometimes it draws more criticism than praise, but she's always committed to speaking out.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump
Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

Greenland Supporters Are Epically Trolling Trump With Their Latest Twist On His MAGA Slogan

Amid President Donald Trump's push to seize control of Greenland from Denmark, the island territory's supporters have people cheering now that they're wearing their own red hats with a twist on the infamous "Make America Great Again" slogan.

At a protest held in the Danish capital of Copenhagen, demonstrators against Trump's aggression wore red hats emblazoned with the phrase “Make America Go Away.” The design cleverly reworks Trump’s well-known slogan, which is commonly associated with red hats.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Scott Bessent
Fox Business

Treasury Secretary Blasted Over Out-Of-Touch Remark About How Many Homes People Buy For Retirement

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent had people raising their eyebrows after he made an out-of-touch remark at the World Economic Forum about the number of homes people purchase for their retirement, claiming at a time when Americans are struggling with a nationwide cost-of-living crisis that some are purchasing as many as "12 homes" for their golden years.

Bessent described the administration’s strategy to limit the role of large institutional buyers in the single-family housing market, while preserving protections for smaller, independent landlords, including those who rely on rental properties for retirement income.

Keep ReadingShow less