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  1. Jul 16, 2021 · People who believe in luck describe themselves as either lucky or unlucky as if luck were a stable and enduring personality characteristic. However, researchers who study luck usually see...

    • They leap at opportunities. Lucky people are not set on a fixed way of achieving their goals. This kind of flexibility puts them in situations where they're more likely to meet and network with new people, according to Wiseman's research.
    • They listen to their intuition. Personality tests revealed that unlucky people are generally more tense and anxious, Wiseman found. That anxiety can lead to indecision.
    • They are optimists. In Wiseman's research, lucky people often still found something positive about an "unlucky" situation. In one experiment, he asked people to imagine a scenario where they are waiting in a bank when "an armed robber enters the bank, fires a shot, and the bullet hits them in the arm."
    • They are resilient. Lucky people bounce back even when things don’t go their way. "They tend to imagine spontaneously how the bad luck they encounter could have been worse and, in doing so, they feel much better about themselves and their lives," according to Wiseman.
  2. Aug 4, 2022 · Why We Believe in Luck. Our notions of chance, fate, or fortune really can shape what happens to us—just not in the way we might think. Here’s how our practice reveals a wiser way of “getting lucky.”. By Misty Pratt. August 4, 2022. Focus. Adobe Stock/ ViDi Studio. Imagine you’re driving to work one morning.

    • Be Mindful. Mindfulness is being non-judgmentally alert and aware of what’s going on around you as well as inside you—how you’re thinking and feeling.
    • Be proactive. "Lucky" people make things happen. They are proactive rather than reactive. They make their future. And when you can take responsibility for your words, actions, and behavior, you have more control of your destiny.
    • Be opportunistic. Successful people are opportunists. They have the ability to take advantage of novel and often concealed opportunities when they arise.
    • Be insightful. There are two types of knowledge—explicit and implicit (or tacit). Explicit knowledge is the kind people gain from reading books and going to school—factual stuff.
    • JR Thorpe
    • Lucky People Are Extroverts. The big daddy of luck and psychology is the psychologist Richard Wiseman, who's done extensive studies on what lucky people do differently.
    • Lucky People Have Open, Positive Body Language. Wiseman's research also found that extroverts with lucky experiences tended to exhibit open, pleasurable body language when encountering others, drawing them in and making them more inclined to form a social connection or make an advantageous offer.
    • Lucky People Say "Yes" To Risks. Lucky people also grab opportunities and say "Yes": it's now a commonplace in studies of serendipity to point out that opportunities tend to follow much more from taking risks and agreeing to unexpected proposals than from caution.
    • Lucky People Have Positive Expectations. Wiseman's research also found that positive expectation was a fundamental part of experiencing luck. In other words, people who genuinely believed that good things would happen to them tended to encounter more good fortune.
  3. 1. Frane Selak - Widely regarded as one of the luckiest people in history due to a series of remarkable escapes from death and a subsequent lottery win. Selak's lucky streak began in 1962 when he was on a train that derailed and plunged into a river, killing 17 passengers.

  4. Jun 9, 2014 · Why You Should Believe in Luck. A new study shows that you really do make your own breaks. Here's how. Posted June 9, 2014. Aleshyn Andrei/Shutterstock. Our mindset is a powerful thing. I often...