
Luck is a repeatable system: train attention, action, and networks to invite chance.
Luck often rises from cognitive biases: people misremember lucky streaks while forgetting random dips that canceled them out.
Random events cluster in time, making rare outcomes feel lucky when they’re merely due for a cluster, not special luck.
Studies show gamblers’ brains respond to near-misses with similar arousal as wins, fooling them into chasing luck.
A single positive reinterpretation of a setback can boost perceived luck by half a standard deviation, altering future choices.

Luck is a repeatable system: train attention, action, and networks to invite chance.
Luck often rises from cognitive biases: people misremember lucky streaks while forgetting random dips that canceled them out.
Random events cluster in time, making rare outcomes feel lucky when they’re merely due for a cluster, not special luck.
Studies show gamblers’ brains respond to near-misses with similar arousal as wins, fooling them into chasing luck.
A single positive reinterpretation of a setback can boost perceived luck by half a standard deviation, altering future choices.
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