TO CHANGE YOUR LUCK
A band of young car thieves thought they’d found the perfect plan.
They set to work stealing cars in a mall parking lot on one of the
busiest days of the year. Unfortunately, their first choice was their
worst choice. They spotted a nice-looking van and began picking the
locks. In no time at all the door opened, and inside they found .
police officers, who were using the vehicle as an undercover
surveillance van!
One might say that they ran into some bad luck. (Or maybe stealing
cars was a bad decision to begin with and luck had nothing to do with
it.)
Many people DO try to manage their luck, however. So they believe in
rituals and talismans to aid in their success. According to Jeanne
Ralston (“What’s Luck Go To Do With It?” Ladies Home Journal, Jan.,
1999), athletes, as a group, are often superstitious. Home-run king
Hank Aaron wore the same shower shoes for twenty years because he
thought they brought him luck, and basketball great Michael Jordan
felt more confident with his University of North Carolina basketball
shorts under his Chicago Bulls uniform.
Some of us go for four leaf clovers, a superstition from the Druids of
medieval Europe who believed that the plant imparted to those who
found them special powers to see invisible witches and evil spirits.
Others may carry a rabbit’s foot. It was because of the great
bunny-making capabilities of rabbits that ancient Celts believed they
should be associated with luck and prosperity. Still other people
speak of knocking on wood, a custom that seems to have grown from a
belief that the noise may prevent evil spirits from hearing you
mention your good luck.
I understand that basketball player George Underwood once said this
about luck: “I have just two superstitions. One, don’t call someone a
bad name if they have a loaded pistol. Two, don’t call your girl
friend Tina if her name is Vivian.”
Robert Collier instructs that all of us have bad luck and good luck.
But the one who persists through the bad luck – who keeps right on
going – is the one who is there when the good luck comes. This person,
says Collier, is the one who is ready to receive that opportunity when
it is presented.
In other words, luck really does favor the prepared. And those who
persist and work hard. “The more I practice,” said golf pro Arnold
Palmer, “the luckier I seem to get.”
To change your luck, change your attitude from pessimism to optimism.
Something good really IS around the corner. Then work hard and be
ready. When that next opportunity comes, you’ll be the one to seize it
a MAKE something happen. It can be your next lucky break!
__________
Found in Steve Goodier NEWEST “electronic” book:
DECIDING HOW TO LIVE
Leave a Reply