I'm sorry, but I don't understand. The randomness I am referring to is that which we encounter every day of our lives. There is no pre-ordained pattern to it, and we have to decide personally how we are going to react to it at any given moment. We do so by using our ability to choose our actions.
That we may not have free will sounds counter-intuitive, and for everyday purposes we operate as if we have, but that doesn't mean it is truly 'free' and while it seems that we really are 'willing' a particular outcome this is by no means certain even in everyday trivia.
For instance, since the sun is approaching the yard-arm, I might decide on a lunchtime beer and the fridge currently contains cans of both Guinness and Fosters, since I've no plans to go out right now the only options are what is in the fridge, which is a consequence of what was chosen when last buying - so my choice of drink this lunchtime is already limited to the constraints over the contents of the fridge, which was determined by my personal inclinations when shopping,on what was available to be purchased, or if I was tempted by any special offers, and if so why was say the Fosters cheaper than usual etc etc etc etc etc.
If I'm indecisive, this involves my thinking since I'm not expressing a preference today: why should I have a preference anyway, but then again why shouldn't I have one, I don't today but I did yesterday, so why not? Must be something to do with how my brain is working today, which doesn't seem the same as it was yesterday, so it isn't a steady state even when it comes down to choosing lunchtime drinks on different days.
If I try to resolve the dilemma by selecting a drink randomly by tossing a coin this is pseudo-random, since not only is the scope of my choice predetermined by the contents of the fridge, it would also be possible with enough information (height, weight speed etc) to predict which way the coin would fall. So, at the point I decide to toss a coin the result is already determined even though I'm not yet aware of it - so even when I think I'm making a random choice I'm not really since there are constraints and conditions that apply even before I consider approaching the fridge.
This probably a clunky example but the point is that, as far as I can see, there are always factors that will influence how I choose even when I think I'm doing so freely on even mundane matters since I'm not divorced from any conditions that precede, influence or constrain my available choices, whether I'm aware of them or not. Thus my choices aren't really 'free' and I can't just 'will' certain outcomes: now which is is to be today Guinness or Fosters, that is the question!