🍀
🎭 Personality
How lucky am I?
Lucky people share 4 behavioral patterns according to research.
Rate each statement 1 (strongly disagree) to 5 (strongly agree). Your score updates live.
1Good things seem to happen to me more than to others.
2I've won contests, raffles, or gotten unexpected windfalls.
3I rarely get sick or have health scares.
4I tend to be in the right place at the right time.
5Opportunities seem to find me without much effort.
6I've avoided accidents or near-misses by pure chance.
7My timing works out — I catch buses, get cancellations, find parking.
8I meet the right people at the right moments.
9Random coincidences often work in my favor.
10When things go wrong, a lucky break usually follows.
Try Next
🧬🔮🫂⚖️🍺😰🔗⚡
What is your Big Five profile?
🎭PersonalityWhat is your Enneagram type?
🎭PersonalityAre you an empath?
🎭PersonalityAre you an ambivert?
🎭PersonalityDo I drink too much alcohol?
❤️HealthIs my anxiety normal?
🧠Mental HealthWhat is your attachment style?
🧿PsychologyCould you have ADHD?
🧩NeurodivergentIs luck real?
Psychologist Richard Wiseman spent 10 years studying luck. His book The Luck Factor (2003) found that "lucky" people share 4 behavioral patterns — and luck can be learned.
The science of luck
- Fortune (items 1-3): Perceived positive outcomes — lucky people notice opportunities others miss
- Timing (items 4-7): Being in the right place — lucky people maximize chance encounters through varied routines
- Serendipity (items 8-10): Meaningful coincidences — lucky people expect good fortune and create self-fulfilling prophecies
Wiseman's 4 principles of luck
- 1. Maximize opportunities: Lucky people build large social networks and stay open to new experiences
- 2. Listen to intuition: They trust gut feelings backed by experience
- 3. Expect good fortune: Positive expectations become self-fulfilling
- 4. Turn bad luck into good: They imagine how things could have been worse and find silver linings
Population norms
- Average score: 27/50
- Extremely lucky (top 15%): Score 37+ out of 50
- Unlucky (bottom 15%): Below 17
- Optimists score ~25% higher than pessimists — luck is partly perception