
40 People Who Were Wrong But Confident Online
This person who attempted to sell their dryer:
This person who was proud of their flowers:
This person who tried to correct the Merriam-Webster dictionary:
This person who couldn't do elementary school math:
This person who misunderstood some important geography:
This person who tried to make an argument that the earth is flat:
This person who misspelled a word and doubled down with an explanation:
This person who was trying to get to know someone:
This person who had a message for baristas:
This person who didn't understand what "theory" meant:
This person who didn't know how time worked:
This person who wanted people to remember their worth:
This parent who needed to get back to school themself:
This person's answer to a Hinge prompt:
This person explaining a game:
This person who realized what "news" meant:
This person trying to find their son's glasses:
This person opening up about their insecurities:
This person who told someone what they were having for breakfast:
This person who was trying to be sexy:
This person who didn't know what the sun was:
This person who didn't understand simple fractions:
This person who stan'ed Big Dairy:
This person who left a review about how fresh a restaurant's food was:
This person who shared their goal for graduating:
This person whose grammar rules made no sense:
This person's message about actors:
This person who corrected someone and still made a mistake:
This person's passionate rant about cats' diets:
This person who just needed to sort out their stomach issues:
This person who found Washington very scenic:
This person who was protecting their food:
This person who thought someone misspelled a word:
This person who insisted that space was fake:
This person who planned to travel outside of the US based on the election outcome:
This person who said blood was blue:
This person who had a hot take about certain wings:
This person who was describing someone's boyfriend:
And finally, thisi person who gave financial advice:
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He would just stand there while I was crying hysterically and say, 'I don't know what to do.'' Zohar initially convinced herself that the relationship was meaningful because it appeared to be a good fit on paper — they texted every day, which was considered a 'green flag' on TikTok and social media. But when her dog died just before their holiday plans, it became painfully clear that her partner couldn't show up for her emotionally. 'I was at his house, and he just made a f----- up comment, and I just said, 'I'm done. I'm not doing this. You're not for me,'" she reminisces. "I left, I cried and I remember looking at my mom saying, 'We're going to go [to San Diego] anyway.'" Little did she know that her decision to go on the trip without him would change everything. Within days, Zohar downloaded Hinge and matched with her now-partner. They eventually went to dinner and 'the rest was history.' "All I kept thinking was, holy s---! Had I come down with that guy, I would have never [made] the decision to say, 'I'm going to do it for me and I'm not going to do it for anyone else,'" she says."It allowed me to be so open to meeting somebody who ended up being so beautiful, and such a great relationship for me," she continues. "But I would never have done it if I hadn't made that one small, inconspicuous decision: I'm not going to let this person ruin my trip. I'm going to go anyway." Today, Zohar is a dating coach who helps others break out of toxic patterns, tune into and prioritize their emotional needs — a career path she never would've imagined just a few years prior. But her journey, she says, is a real-life example of the "butterfly effect" — the idea that small, seemingly insignificant decisions can spark major transformations. Still, that shift didn't happen promoting her clothing brand around the time of Shark Tank, Zohar regularly appeared on podcasts and panels to build her platform. During one event, however, a friend suggested that she start her own podcast, pointing out how naturally she spoke about dating and dismissed the idea at the time, doubting anyone would care about what she had to say.'I had self-identified that if my clothing company didn't work, then I was a failure,' she adds. 'I really believed that I had to do this, and didn't allow myself to leave space for the universe to reveal something else, something bigger for me.' Looking back, Zohar sees the ripple effect of that mindset shift everywhere — not just in her love life, but in her career and sense of self. From walking away from her ex to going on the San Diego trip regardless of what had happened, each choice felt small in the moment, but paved the way for an entirely different future. 'I think the butterfly effect is a small decision that could lead to a larger effect. That's why to me, that one small decision of walking out of my exes' house and not trying to convince him, not trying to keep him and not trying to stay — that one decision of saying, 'F--- it, I'm going to go to San Diego,'' she continues. 'It's a culmination of small decisions that ultimately lead to a total transformation.' While the butterfly effect celebrates small choices leading to big change, Zohar is more skeptical of the idea that people are bound to one another by fate alone, especially when it comes to love. When asked about her thoughts on the 'invisible string theory,' the idea that certain people are cosmically tied together, Zohar has her doubts. 'My concern with [the invisible string theory] is that we put this idea in our heads that certain people are meant to be [in our lives]. What I think that does is [it makes] you force people to stay in your life maybe longer than they need to,' she says.'I've had that [happen to me], where I thought this one guy was my soulmate and [it] was meant to be. It was eight years of this — I held onto this guy for eight f------ years of on and off, back and forth, and he kept getting a new girlfriend.' Instead of clinging to what wasn't working, the 35-year-old dating coach and podcast host learned to loosen her grip and trust the universe. For Zohar, the "butterfly effect" isn't about one perfect, serendipitous moment or obsessing over what's missing — it's about staying present and open to what is still unfolding. 'Every single day means that we're one step closer to what is coming,' she says. Read the original article on People Solve the daily Crossword