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Create Your Own Good Luck
Some Gals Have All the Luck: How to Create Your Own Good Luck
By P J Smith
You probably know a few. These gals marry the millionaire. Meet the talent agent
in the drugstore. Stroll off into the Tahitian sunset with the guy who looks
like Tom Cruise.
Why does the Wheel of Fortune seem to always land on the winning numbers for
some and not others? Is it luck of the draw? Divine decree? Sure, your charmed
galpals were in the right place at the right time. But how'd they get to the
right place in the first place?
One researcher thinks he knows. He's Richard Wiseman, PhD of the University of
Hertfordshire, UK. Dr. Wiseman been studying the lucky and the not-so. He
discovered the lucky among us don't really think they're doing anything
differently. They've just developed attitudes and habits that pay off in good
fortune. His conclusion? A great deal of what you may consider 'luck' results
from your own actions. In fact, good luck is a skill-set you can learn. So,
start the Wheel of Fortune spinning in your direction with these four lucky
attitudes:
• Expect good fortune
• Follow intutive hunches
• Turn bad luck into good
• Create chance opportunities
Dr. Wiseman set up an experiment in which 80 people went to 'luck school.' Over
the course of two years, they were taught the four attitudes. When they first
started, 50% considered themselves unlucky, 40% as neither, and 10% as lucky
After only one month, 80% reported their luck had gotten better.
Great Expectations
• Imagine and visualize success
• Keep on keeping on when facing failure
• Attract other winners to your team
Lucky people naturally assume everything will work out well, even when events
appear otherwise. It's a 'self-fulfilling prophecy.' Expect to do well, and
you're more likely to strike out on new ventures. Expect to fail, and you give
up even before you begin. A positive drive keeps you pumped up when you run into
roadblocks. You also inspire others with your upbeat attitude, drawing other
winners to you and encouraging them to support your projects.
How can you create great expectations? Paint positive pictures in your mind and
feel your dreams fully, as if they were real right now. Take a test run of any
upcoming important opportunity, such as an audition or exam. Find a quiet spot,
close your eyes, and start to picture the event clearly and completely in your
mind's eye. Visualize the sights, sounds, surroundings, and people. Feel the
positive outcome by imagining your elation when you land the part or ace the
exam. Feel that happy glow and how fantastic it will be to tell your family and
friends about your triumph.
Dr. Weisman also recommends starting a 'luck journal.' Write down your daily
lucky breaks and positive outcomes—and only those, no tales of woe, please.
LISTEN TO AND FOLLOW YOUR GUT FEELINGS
• Boost intuition by clearing mind and meditating
• Use discernment
• Listen to and act on your instincts
You've had that instant 'hit' that someone you've just met is—or isn't—to be
trusted. That gut feeling you get—creepy and queasy or warm and fuzzy—is your
unconscious mind speaking. Listen. You'll do well to heed the call. Lucky people
do. They not only listen, they also act, instinctively attracting the right
partners in personal and business relationships, and knowing where to invest
their nest egg.
Learning to listening to your intuition is easy. Sit still for a few minutes in
a quiet place or calm your mind with a meditation technique. Discernment is
important in the process. Do you trust your past experience to guide you? Listen
carefully, then act wisely. A note to those with grandiose schemes: Going by the
gut works best with people, not lottery numbers.
TURN BAD LUCK INTO GOOD – LEMONADE, ANYONE?
• "It coulda been worse"
• Don't dwell on misfortune
• Take charge of bad luck and thrive
It's called 'counterfactual thinking,' according to Dr. Wiseman. The degree to
which you think something is lucky or not is the degree to which you come up
with other scenarios that are better or worse. Delusional? Calling sow's ear a
silk purse? Not really. It's merely learning from experience and mistakes.
You may have no control over certain chance events like accidents or illnesses,
but you do have ultimate control over your response. The fortunate among us
don't constantly complain "If it weren't for bad luck, I'd have no luck at all."
Instead, they consider the worst-case scenario, and move on. Rather than
dwelling the down times, lucky people always see the silver lining and are
convinced things will work out for the best in the long term.
Dr. Wiseman found that when experiment participants were told to imagine they
had slipped on the stairs and sprained an ankle, the "unlucky" ones considered
it very unfortunate. The "lucky" ones said, "Whew, I could have broken my neck!"
Once you've taught yourself to be lucky, you bounce back more easily and
readily. You'll also find yourself taking steps to prevent more bad luck in the
future, and if misfortune rears her ugly head, you're resourceful enough to step
around and carry on.
CREATE CHANCE OPPORTUNITIES – YOU DESERVE A LUCKY BREAK TODAY
• Build and maintain a strong network
• Be open to new experiences
• Relax
Lucky people's lives are filled with fortunate events. The right mindset will
take you to the right place at the right time.This is where a little bit of
planning and paving the yellow brick road comes in: Dr. Wiseman recommends
'networking' to maximize your chances for good luck. Get out there and spend
more time with friends, smile at people, and yes—contrary to your mother's
advice—do talk with strangers. Then stay connected. You never know where a
chance encounter will take you.
Don't get stuck in a rut. You're more apt to spot an lucky break when you're out
of your 'comfort zone.' So, try eating at different restaurants or taking
another way to work, for instance. Above all, just relax. You don't need to rush
around chasing opportunities. In fact, a frenzied approach can blind you to the
lucky breaks, like meeting the love of your life in the checkout line. And then,
you too may be strolling off into the Tahitian sunset with the guy who looks
like Tom Cruise.
To learn more, read Dr. Wiseman's book, The Luck Factor: Changing Your Luck,
Changing Your Life: The Four Essential Principles (Miramax, 2003).
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