| Lucky
people meet their perfect partners, achieve their lifelong ambitions,
find fulfilling careers, and live happy and meaningful lives. Their
success is not due to them working especially hard, being amazingly
talented or exceptionally intelligent. Instead, they simply appear
to have an uncanny ability to be in the right place at the right
time and enjoy more than their fair share of lucky breaks.
The Luck Project
scientifically explores why some people live such charmed lives,
and aims to develop techniques that enable others to enhance their
own good fortune. The main findings from the research have been
published in Prof. Wiseman’s bestselling book The
Luck Factor.
The Luck Project
was originally conceived to scientifically explore psychological
differences between people who considered themselves exceptionally
lucky and unlucky. This initial work was funded by The Leverhulme
Trust and undertaken by Prof. Wiseman in collaboration with Dr.
Matthew Smith and Dr. Peter Harris.
Prof. Wiseman
has since built upon this initial work by identifying the four basic
principles used by lucky people to create good fortune in their
lives, and developing techniques that enable individuals to enhance
their own good luck. This research has involved working with hundreds
of exceptionally lucky and unlucky people, and has employed various
methods to better understand the psychology of luck.
The results
of this work reveal that people are not born lucky. Instead, lucky
people are, without realising it, using four basic principles to
create good fortune in their lives:
Principle
One: Maximise Chance Opportunities
Lucky people are skilled at creating, noticing and acting upon chance
opportunities. They do this in various ways, including networking,
adopting a relaxed attitude to life and by being open to new experiences.
Principle
Two: Listening to Lucky Hunches
Lucky people make effective decisions by listening to their intuition
and gut feelings. In addition, they take steps to actively boost
their intuitive abilities by, for example, meditating and clearing
their mind of other thoughts.
Principle
Three: Expect Good Fortune
Lucky people are certain that the future is going to be full of
good fortune. These expectations become self-fulfilling prophecies
by helping lucky people persist in the face of failure, and shape
their interactions with others in a positive way.
Principle
Four: Turn Bad Luck to Good
Lucky people employ various psychological techniques to cope with,
and often even thrive upon, the ill fortune that comes their way.
For example, they spontaneously imagine how things could have been
worse, do not dwell on the ill fortune, and take control of the
situation.
A key aspect
of The Luck Project involves developing techniques that help people
increase the good fortune they encounter in their life. These techniques
help people think and behave like a lucky person. The efficacy of
these techniques has been scientifically tested in a series of experiments
referred to as ‘luck schools’. These studies involve
identifying participants’ ‘luck profiles’ –
a measure of the degree to which they incorporate the principles
of luck into their lives and then asking them to carry out specially-designed
exercises that target areas in need of enhancement.
Luck school
has proved highly successful, with almost all participants reporting
significant life changes, including increased levels of luck, self-esteem,
confidence and success.
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