People love to talk about luck as if it’s a rogue wave. A meteor. A scratch-off ticket blessed by the gods of convenience stores. You either have it or you don’t. Elaine Benes has it. George Costanza absolutely does not.
And Jerry? Jerry is even Steven. Which honestly feels like the cruelest fate of all.
I think about that Seinfeld episode a lot. The one where Elaine keeps stumbling into good fortune, George is cosmically cursed, and Jerry floats neutrally through life like a beige sofa. George, in peak desperation, decides to do the opposite of every instinct he’s ever had and suddenly? Things start working out.
Which brings me to my unpopular opinion: Luck isn’t always random.
Sometimes, people make it.
Psychology has a term for this. Resilient expectancy. It sounds fancy and academic, but the idea is pretty simple. People who expect things to work out (not magically, not delusionally but possibilistically) tend to behave in ways that allow good things to happen.
They show up. They linger.
They say yes more than no.
They stand a little closer to the action.
Sound counterintuitive? Maybe. But watch the so-called “lucky” people long enough and you’ll notice something suspicious: they’re rarely passive.
Now, before we go any further, let me be clear. I am not out here winning the lottery. I do not play the lotto with any consistency, and when I do, I mostly donate money to the state like a responsible adult. I did once win $750 after putting four quarters into a slot machine, which I mention not to brag but to prove that randomness does occasionally flirt with me and then immediately leave.
So, no. I am not winning bingo on a daily basis.
But I do have a knack.
For me, luck often looks like being in the right place at the right time. And by “luck,” I mean that I physically place myself in the right place. I show up. I attend. I stand near the stage. I end up in the photo op holding the trophy, announcing the next world conference location, or accidentally positioned exactly where something interesting is about to happen.
People sometimes joke about it. Sometimes they’re amused. Sometimes it bothers them. (Which I also find interesting.)
“How does that always happen to you?” they ask.
And the honest answer is deeply unsexy. I don’t wait to be invited into the frame. I step into it.
That’s resilient expectancy in action. It’s not arrogance. It’s not entitlement. It’s a quiet internal assumption that something might come of this. So I might as well be present when it does.
George Costanza had to do the opposite of his instincts because his instincts were rooted in avoidance, pessimism, and self-sabotage. Elaine didn’t “get lucky” because the universe liked her better. She expected life to deliver and behaved accordingly.
Luck, it turns out, has a behavioral component.
It favors the people who:
Stay curious instead of withdrawn
Assume opportunity over rejection
Try again after disappointment
Put themselves close enough for chance to notice them
Which doesn’t mean bad things won’t happen. They will. Trust me. But resilient expectancy is the belief that setbacks aren’t the end of the story. They’re just a chapter break.
So yes. You’ve got to play to win.
But more importantly?
You’ve got to show up to the game.
And if that means standing a little closer to the stage, smiling for the camera, and trusting your internal compass, even when it looks like luck from the outside so be it.
Because sometimes luck isn’t random. Sometimes it’s practiced.
Categories: Culture, identity, Leadership, mental health, society, TV, workplace





So fabulous. Know what? I’m lucky to read your work every morning. It is fantastic!
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Make Every Move Holy Dance
Every Word Sacred Song
All PArts of The WHoLe
A Poetry Prompt to
Further Relate in
Arts Far Beyond
Only Dance And Song
With
SMiLes
Some Associated Quotes by Rumi
“Live as if life is rigged in your favor.”
“Do not feel lonely, the entire universe is inside you.
Stop acting so small. You are the universe in ecstatic motion.”
And As Modern Science Attests the Power of Belief as that
Relates to Who or What We Believe in That Will Heal Us of Life’s Ills
Placebo
Is Real Per
The Drawers
of Unexplained
Remission of Previously
Terminal Diagnoses as Such
Further Evidence is With the Negative Impacts
Of the Nocebo Effect For the Power of Belief
In the DarK of What Brings Us Down Even into
An Early
Demise For Real
Yet Not Everyone is
Subject to the Power
of These Suggestions These Ways
For It Even to Work one Must Become
A True Believer in LiGHT or DarK Ways of LiFE
Indeed in
ThiS WaY
So-called
White and
Black Magic is Real
Yet Again Only For those
Who Develop Their Power of
Believe Far Beyond the Measure of
Science Alone
The Term Luck
is Rather Empty to me
Where Emotional Intent
in Will And Focus Will Move Us
to Actions Deep in the Music of Our
Organic Souls That Bring a For Tune of Existence
Instead of
An Against
Tune of Existence
Finding a Song of Soul
That Works in Whatever
Art or Science We Create in Life Next
Most Important Yes
each move we make
next whether dance song
Or the
Cure to
Every Form
of Cancer
Starting With
Our Own Powers
of Believe For Tune
FLoWinG Free
Instead
of Against
Tune of Souls
PrisonS iNDeeD
Ocean Whole Free
Dear Miriam
With
SMiLes..:)
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