First of all, you should know there’s a powerful link of cause and effect between your attitude to life and the luck you may or may not get.
Chance is the opposite of luck. Think perhaps of a game of dice, which relies purely on chance. A normal dice should have one chance in six of falling on each face (assuming it isn’t loaded, obviously). Chance constitutes an exception to the laws of nature, in which improbable series do occur, because he who has luck may find the winning number several times in a row. The same lucky individual may avoid misfortune and bad luck throughout his life.
So you might think that someone who has luck is "protected". And you would be absolutely right! Consciously or otherwise, a person who’s lucky has a special state of mind that can repel the harmful, negative vibrations that are responsible for bad luck.
Some people are convinced they are cursed, unlucky or the victims of misfortune. They need to realise this is indeed the case, and will continue to be the case for so long as they believe and act accordingly.
Just believing in bad luck is enough to earn you a seemingly endless series of strokes of misfortune. Yes, if you think yourself unlucky, you will be. The contrary is also true, although it’s harder to think ourselves lucky because of the negative thoughts, emotions and beliefs that plague us. That’s why it’s easier to start smoking again or put on weight than give up smoking or lose weight.
Be aware of the power of your mind, the strength of your ideas and the role your belief system plays.
First of all, you must halt the conditioning process perpetuated by you saying you have no luck in life. The great military strategist Napoleon Bonaparte avoided anyone who was unlucky, and he was right, since they are contagious and can ‘jinx’ you.
Believing in your luck makes you lucky, although it may happen in less spectacular way than for bad luck; when people think they are on a lucky streak, opportunities crop up.
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