When we
receive excellent news, sometimes we wonder if it is true. This was what
happened to Veronique Jacquet when she heard the news on the local radio that
she had won a Michelin star this year. It was highly impossible as her
restaurant didn't fit the criteria of a gourmet restaurant at all.
Mrs.
Jacquet runs Le Bouche à Oreille in Bourges in central France. It is a modest,
lunch-only bistro with 20 tables and a clientele mostly of local workers. Even
the cook works part time and Mrs. Jacquet herself is the only other member of
the staff. And so it turned out to be a technical mistake as the restaurant
that actually won the Michelin star is about 120 miles away in the village of Boutervilliers and has
the same name.
Then
there is this bizarre story of Frane Selak, a Croatian music teacher who escaped death when a train he was on
fell into the lake. After that, he survived a car crash, allegedly fell out of
the plane, and landed in a stack of hay, while 19 passengers tragically died. Finally, Frane in 2003 won about €800,000 in a lottery.
There’s
also this expression “the luck of the Irish” and I thought it meant that the
people from Ireland are lucky.
However, according to Edward T. O’Donnell, an Associate Professor of History at
Holy Cross College and author of "1001 Things Everyone Should Know About
Irish American History," the term is not Irish in origin.
"During
the gold and silver rush years in the second half of the 19th century, a number
of the most famous and successful miners were of Irish and Irish American birth....Over time
this association of the Irish with mining fortunes led to the expression 'luck
of the Irish.' Of course, it carried with it a certain tone of derision, as if
to say, only by sheer luck, as opposed to brains, could these fools
succeed."
The
Malay proverb ‘Durian Runtuh’ means a windfall. Literally it is an avalanche of
durians. Even now I dream of eating the rich and creamy durian. But then again
I digress.
Every
so often we wish for nice things to happen : winning the lottery especially. I
have seen so many hopefuls at the supermarket counter buying lottery tickets.
The idea of getting big money at an affordable price is too hard to resist. Raffles
are also very popular here and for 5 euro you get 3 chances of winning prizes.
Usually they are done to raise funds for a club or a specific cause. You can
sense the spirit of hope and expectation in the air. However, we hear of
many saying ' I never win anything'
maybe because in any draw, the winners are few and the disappointed many.
There
are some people who are always on a winning streak - so we say that lady luck
is smiling on them. Or grudgingly we mutter beneath our breath 'some people
have all the luck'
Tempting
though it may be, I do not buy lotteries or gamble in the hope of striking it
rich.
In fact, about 70 percent of people who win a lottery or
get a big windfall actually end up broke in a few years, according to the
National Endowment for Financial Education. Scary but true.
I used
to enter many competitions because I enjoyed solving puzzles and coming up with
creative slogans. To that end I did win many holiday trips abroad and
electrical appliances. Now I've passed on that mantel to my son.
I
remember once when we released a fire lantern into the sky. The host of the party
asked us to scribble our hopes on the lantern. We decided on ‘Good health’
while others wrote ‘Money, money, money’.
Luck is fortune which is an unknown and
unpredictable phenomenon that causes an event to result in one way rather than
another.
Blessing on the other hand is the formal act of approving and of
divine grace. So, I attribute all that I
had, have or will have to being blessed rather than being lucky. It lies in the difference in the mind set and heart
where I do not leave happy events to chance. It is also an attitude of
gratitude. When we know that we are blessed, then it is so easy for us to give
to others.
So
what happened in the end to the bistro that was told it had received the
Michelin star?
When Jacquet’s cook Penelope Salmon
was asked whether she ever dreamt of receiving a Michelin star, she said, ‘No,
not at all. I cook with my heart.’
The
last time I heard was that the lunch spot has received really
good reviews on Google.
THIS ARTICLE WAS ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED IN THE NEW STRAITS TIMES MALAYSIA ON 11 JUNE 2017 https://www.nst.com.my/opinion/columnists/2017/06/247685/matter-luck
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