The 10% Strategy
#probabilities
Scott Adams offers a simple reframe for romantic struggles: stop trying to appeal to the 90% who aren't attracted to your type and focus on the 10% who are. "If you meet 100 people," Adams notes, "10 might find you attractive for exactly who you are." One woman told him that any man with a job and gym membership already ranks in the top 20% of desirable men. The solution isn't transformation—it's probability. Join clubs, play sports, change jobs. Whatever increases your social circle increases your odds.
This same mathematical principle explains why television psychics seem to possess supernatural powers. There are about 100,000 five-minute periods in a year. The probability that any given watch will stop in a designated five-minute period is about 1 in 100,000. But if 10 million people are watching a psychic's show, and half are wearing watches, we could expect about 25 watches to stop in any given minute. Low odds for any individual become near certainties across large populations.
Romance works the same way. It's not about being universally desirable. It's about meeting enough people that the math works in your favor.