for the plot

Etymology 1
All senses originate from the phrase sense. Coined as an inspirational phrase by actress and media personality Serena Kerrigan in a video posted to the social media video-sharing service on 23 July 2021, in which she alluded to every person being the main character of their own storyline: “If something works out, great, and if it doesn't, it's for the plot”. By this, she meant that negative events and obstacles are inevitable in one's life in order to advance “the plot” onto the next plot point (presumably a more positive one) in their life.

Phrase

 * 1)  Everything happens for a reason.

Prepositional phrase

 * 1)  Suggests doing something adventurous or risky just for the sake of it.
 * 2)  take a risk; take a chance.

Etymology 2
Originates from a sarcastic Internet meme from c.2011 in which users assert they watch something “for the plot”; often a video or image macro of a risqué or otherwise questionable scene from a work of fiction (originally especially of ) accompanied with the text “I watch it for the plot” or “I watch [name of the work of fiction] for the plot”.