No. I just type more accurately than the average Google user, so when I do type an unusual word it is more likely that I intended to type it.
Google could fix this (with logged in users) by using some type of Bayesian classification algorithm. They could track how often a user subsequently clicks "Showing results for _____" compared to "Search instead for ______". That would give them a self-rated user typing accuracy score they could use to adjust which results to display when they detect a potential misspelling.
For all I know they already do this. However, based on anecdotal evidence from my own experience (admittedly non-scientific), it does not appear that they do.
I'd love to see your statistics on that - you must use a lot of very unusual words. Google has published a paper about the algorithm they use.
There are two cases:
If Google thinks you might be wrong it will display "Did you mean..." with the possible correction.
If Google is pretty sure you are wrong, it will search for what it thinks is correct and show what you typed originally as an option.
If you are hitting the second case 90% of the time then you are a very, very special snowflake indeed!
I have to go back and explicitly tell it that I meant to tell it what I told it
You have to click on the link to say you really meant what you typed.