The Beauty of Connections: How Science Illuminates Our Everyday Lives


Last week, I curled up with a cup of tea and a copy of Ivar Ekeland’s Mathematics and the Unexpected. I’ll be honest—I picked it up hoping for a little intellectual adventure, but what I found was a book that made me pause, ponder, and see my life in a new light. Occasionally, when I feel a bit stale or stuck in my routines, I like to pick up a new, challenging, and completely unrelated book—just to sweep the cobwebs from my head and invite fresh ideas. As I turned the pages, I circled words in my mind like “chaos theory,” “patterns,” and “the beauty of unpredictability.” I started to wonder: what if these scientific concepts aren’t just for mathematicians, but are invitations for all of us to see the wonder woven into our everyday lives?


Finding Wonder in the Everyday

Have you ever noticed how a tiny change can ripple through your whole day? Maybe you woke up five minutes late, and suddenly everything felt off. Or perhaps you tried a new habit—lighting a candle before breakfast, pausing to breathe before responding to a child—and the energy in your home shifted. This is chaos theory in action: the “butterfly effect” that reminds us how small beginnings can have big, unpredictable outcomes.

In science, chaos theory describes systems that are sensitive, interconnected, and full of surprises. The weather is a classic example—one gust of wind can change the forecast for a whole week. But chaos isn’t just out there in the world; it’s in our kitchens, our relationships, our hearts. It’s the reason parenting can feel like an adventure (or a roller coaster) and why no two days are ever quite the same.


Patterns in the Messiness

Here’s the beautiful secret: even in the chaos, there are patterns waiting to be discovered. Mathematicians call them “strange attractors”—shapes that emerge when you step back and look at the big picture. In our lives, these patterns might show up as recurring challenges, cycles of growth and rest, or the gentle return of hope after a hard season.

When we look for these connections—between science and story, between cause and effect—we start to see our lives not as random or out of control, but as meaningful, dynamic, and full of possibility.


Real-Life Connections

  • Parenting: The mood in a household can shift with a single word or gesture. A small act of kindness (or frustration) can echo through the day.
  • Habits: Trying one new routine—a gratitude list, a morning walk—can set off a chain reaction, opening up new “spaces of possibility.”
  • Emotions: Our feelings are dynamic systems, too. A moment of self-compassion can soften a whole week.

Embracing the Unexpected

Chaos theory teaches us that we don’t have to control everything. Instead, we can focus on the small choices that matter, trust the process, and look for beauty in the unfolding. When we approach life with curiosity and grace, the unexpected becomes a source of wonder, not just stress.


Reflection: Where Do You See Patterns?

Take a moment to notice the “science” in your own story. Where have small changes led to surprising results? What patterns or cycles do you see in your days, your moods, your growth? How might embracing the messiness open up new possibilities for joy, connection, or healing?


Journaling Prompt

“Looking back over the past week, where did a small change ripple out in unexpected ways? What patterns—beautiful or challenging—do you notice in your daily life? How might science (and a little wonder) help you see your story in a new light?”


You’re already the diamond—you just need a little polish. 💎

Cheering you on as you find beauty in every twist and turn.

With love, Olga

One Hundred Years from Now

by Olga Pyshnyak-Lawrence

Between chores and to-do’s, I managed to quickly slip into the Lyndon House in Athens—literally as I was driving from point A to B. My soul was seduced by a craving to do something random, something passionate, something to fill me up, even though I didn’t know why at the time.

The modern art is not my cup of tea, generally. Anybody can be an artist nowadays, that’s true, albeit not a very good one. My soul craves beauty and something long lasting…and that’s one of the reasons I love the past so much, not simply for the curious stories and historical facts, but for the care and appreciation given to beautiful and elaborate objects of admiration or daily use.

I walked quickly past the modern objects screaming on the walls and straight to the historical building attached. A reverent hush falls over me as I enter the space that housed families and generations. Their dramas and tragedies, hopes and crushed dreams… I can envision the hustle and bustle of their everyday, their stunning surroundings. This family was well off and could enjoy that extra morsel of luxury.

But what pierced my heart and soul so desperately as I looked upon the remnants of lives before me was the very painful and thought-provoking question: “What will my children or grandchildren say about me 100 years from now?” or will they say anything at all? And then, the next question begs my attention, “What do I want them to say about me?” Will anything remain of me? Will someone someday look upon the remnants of my life, the ashes of my quests, and ponder my existence?

What will I leave behind to the generations that are to come? What legacy will survive after I am long gone? Of course, I’ve rambled down the less traveled road…and so I mused…

One day, I will die and this is not a thought we contemplate often, but perhaps one should… To live a life worth living, one must do it knowing it will all end one day. We do not hold forever captive. Occasionally, one must revisit the unconscious priorities programmed into our daily systems.

What do you want YOUR children and grandchildren to say about you 100 years from now? Or should you even care?

I do.

In fact, I care very deeply. And this forces me to revisit my list and rankings of priorities in my life.

I want my children and my grandchildren to say:

  • She truly lived boldly
  • Danced to her own convictions
  • And in the process of setting others free, she liberated herself

Everything I do, I teach my children to do the same, consciously or subconsciously.

And they will do the same with their very own.

And here is the grand idea. Do you realize that you, yes you, sitting down right now at your table, on your couch, wherever the heck you may be, you are directly connected to the generations coming after you? What is the inheritance you leave behind?

I want my grandchildren and great grandchildren and so forth, to live BOLDLY, DANCE to their own convictions, and BE FREE.

In essence, I want them to BE FREE to DANCE BOLDLY. That is the inheritance I will leave behind.

And between now and then, I will show them the way, teach them how it’s done.