There is a universal law of technology that scientists refuse to study because it would destroy morale:
Bluetooth will always connect to the one device you absolutely did not want it to connect to.
Not sometimes. Not occasionally. Scientifically guaranteed chaos.
Step 1: You Open Bluetooth
You confidently go into settings like a responsible adult.
Your phone says:
- Headphones_Ali
- Speaker_LivingRoom
- Car_System
- “Samsung TV (Neighbor’s?)”
- “Unknown Device (Very Suspicious)”
Everything looks normal. Too normal. That’s the first warning sign.
Step 2: You Choose Carefully
You tap your headphones.
Your phone responds immediately:
“Connecting to ‘Kitchen Smart Toaster 2.0’…”
You do not own a smart toaster.
You have never owned a smart toaster.
And yet… the toast starts playing music.
Step 3: The Wrong Connection Phenomenon
Bluetooth has three favorite targets:
- The device you clicked yesterday
- A device you have never seen in your life
- Your neighbor’s TV at 3% volume, broadcasting a soap opera titled Love, Betrayal & Firmware Updates
Your actual headphones? Ignored. Ghosted. Emotionally unavailable.
Step 4: The Name Deception
Bluetooth devices love lying through naming.
- “My Headphones” → connects to car stereo
- “Car Audio” → connects to your smartwatch
- “AirPods” → connects to your cousin’s phone across the street
- “JBL Speaker” → connects to a printer from 2014
At this point, naming devices feels less like organization and more like summoning spirits.
Step 5: The “Device Not Found” Humiliation
You stand next to your headphones.
You hold them.
You stare at them.
Your phone says:
“No devices available.”
Meanwhile, your toaster is streaming Spotify again.
Step 6: The Retry Ritual
Every Bluetooth user performs the same sacred sequence:
- Turn Bluetooth off
- Wait 2 seconds (important for vibes)
- Turn Bluetooth on
- Stare aggressively
- Tap the same wrong device again
- Pretend this time will be different
It never is.
Step 7: The Final Betrayal
Eventually, it connects correctly.
Not because you fixed anything.
Not because you did anything right.
But because Bluetooth simply got bored of ruining your day and decided to cooperate for 12 seconds.
Conclusion
Bluetooth is not a technology.
It is a personality test designed to measure how quickly you can lose patience with invisible forces.
If your device connects correctly on the first try, congratulations:
You are either extremely lucky…
or someone else in your building is currently listening to your music through a printer


