“Apophenia is the experience of seeing meaningful patterns or connections in random or meaningless data.”
It is the very human tendency to put meaning into random and unrelated information.
For example, I recently saw Dog in the wood grain of a baseboard at a local restaurant.
Some would call it pareidolia (a vague and random stimulus being perceived as significant).
I call it Pookie.
The owners of Cafe Pickles are now charging pilgrims $15 each to view the miracle.
Anyway, there’s a reason I’ve dropped six dollars worth of three-dollar words (apophenia and pareidolia) on you.
Last night I was riding home in the dark, and I was lit up with bike lights like Times Square on wheels.
On the front of my bike, I had a Planet Bike Beamer 3 in flash mode, a Light and Motion Urban 500 on high. On my helmet, I had my Fire Eye light. I keep a Planet Bike Superflash permanently attached to my rack-top bag, and I had a Portland Design Works Danger Zone tail light attached to my rear rack.
In case you’re not keeping track, that’s two headlights and three tail lights.
Two of these lights I’ll be reviewing in the near future (Danger Zone and Urban 500). The other three are ones that I use regularly (until I upgrade).
Okay. So I’m not the most lit-up safety kook you’ve ever seen, but I’m getting there. This is at the end of another two-day marathon of writing about bike lights for Bike Tech Shop.
I start up the hill at the bottom of Ponderosa Drive, and something catches my eye. In the middle of the bike path, is a blinking light. It’s a Planet Bike Blinky 3 that has become separated from it’s owner.
I think, This is weird. Who but me would not only come across a bike light in the middle of a bike path, but identify it from a distance? Like some bird nerd who shouts, I say! I do believe that’s a Nutting’s Flycatcher!
Weird, huh?
I leave the light by the side of the road, still blinking, so it could be found if the owner came looking for it. This morning it was gone.
What does this mean?