New on the Blog: A Search Function for Deeper Exploration

Introducing a search function

Over the years, my blog has grown into a substantial archive.

More than 100 essays, written across two decades, explore topics such as authentic serendipity, Kairos and Chronos, Arthur Koestler’s wisdoms like bisociation, several examples of serendipity cases, provocative openings of luck being not a factor in insights, book reviews of books with a high relevance in these topics, intriguing guest blogs. The most recent essays introduce 21st-Century Jesters and explain their role in sensemaking, innovation, ecosystems.

The best compliment was when one reader described my essays as the quiet art of noticing what others overlook.

Until now, finding a specific idea often required time, memory — and patience, but this is now improved with search function.

Why this matters

These essays were never meant to be read only linearly. Their content is meant to last, even the ld ones shine today with bright insight.
The essays form a thinking landscape rather than a chronological feed.

The search function helps you to:

  • revisit ideas you half-remember but couldn’t easily relocate

  • trace how concepts such as serendipity, Kairos, or jesters evolved over time

  • discover unexpected connections between essays written years apart

  • dive deeper into topics that are often diluted or oversimplified elsewhere

In classic Walpolean serendipity terms: while searching for one idea, you may encounter something potentially serendipitous 🙂 — an unexpected insight that reveals its value only to a prepared and curious mind.

A small tool — with a larger intention

Good ideas should not disappear into timelines or be buried by algorithms.
They should remain accessible, revisitable, and open to reinterpretation.

This search function is a practical step in that direction — helping readers move not only forward, but sideways, diagonally, and occasionally off the expected path.

Whether you arrive with a clear question or simple curiosity, the archive is now easier to explore.

Visit the blog. Try the search. Follow where it leads.

May Kairos be with you when searching!

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Serendipitor

I used to call myself an explorer of life — but over time I’ve realized that my journey is not about exploration. It’s been a series of Peregrinaggios — pilgrimages of the mind and heart. Life is far too sacred to be wandered through as a tourist. Better to travel it as a pilgrim, open to what unfolds, humbled by what reveals itself along the way. Read more

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