While most people deem luck as mere chance, it’s time to challenge this notion and shift the power dynamic. Luck isn’t just a random event—it’s something you can actively create.
Educators, like many professionals, navigate a journey filled with lessons, milestones, and moments of reflection. Along this path, it’s easy to observe others’ successes and attribute them to luck. But true success often comes from preparation, persistence, and perspective. As we embrace growth, let’s redefine luck not as a fleeting moment of chance, but as an outcome shaped by intentional actions.
Here are five practical strategies to help educators cultivate their own luck:
1. Put Yourself in Luck’s Way
Opportunities surround us, yet many people remain blind to them—either stuck in comfort zones or hesitant to take risks. To create luck, you must position yourself in places where opportunities can arise. It’s not about waiting for the “right place, right time” moment but about recognizing chances and acting on them.
As Thomas Jefferson once said, “I’m a great believer in luck, and I find the harder I work, the more I have of it.” Luck thrives at the intersection of preparation and action:
LUCK = OPPORTUNITY + HARD WORK
2. Find Gatekeepers
Gatekeepers are individuals who hold access to resources, networks, or opportunities. Luck often comes through connections with these influential figures. Networking isn’t just about knowing people—it’s about offering value in return.
Ask yourself: What can I contribute to others? By demonstrating your value and reliability, you become someone gatekeepers trust and advocate for. Building relationships with these connectors can open doors that once seemed unreachable.
3. Behave and Act Lucky
Your mindset and behavior can shape your reality. Confidence, body language, and intentional actions create a powerful alignment with your goals. When you project confidence and clarity, opportunities are more likely to align with you.
Self-doubt is natural, but it mustn’t dominate your narrative. Like an artist chiseling a sculpture from stone, refine your mindset, actions, and presence until they mirror your aspirations.
4. Believe You Are Lucky
The mind is a powerful tool. Consider the study of hotel maids who exceeded daily exercise recommendations without realizing it. When informed of their activity levels, they showed measurable improvements in health markers—simply because their mindset shifted.
The same principle applies to luck. If you perceive yourself as lucky and capable, you’ll start seeing opportunities more clearly. Life unfolds in intricate patterns, and every experience holds a purpose. Recognize and appreciate the journey.
5. Be Persistent with a Definition of Purpose
Persistence is the silent architect of success. Imagine each action, no matter how small, as a brick in the wall of your achievements. Over time, these bricks build something meaningful.
Stay focused on your purpose. Even when luck seems elusive, consistent effort compounds over time. Keep showing up, keep refining, and keep believing.
Final Thoughts
There’s no better time to start than now. Words can inspire, but actions create change. Luck isn’t an accident—it’s an outcome of purposeful living, persistent effort, and a resilient mindset.
Educators, embrace your power to create your own luck. Lead by example, inspire others, and seize every opportunity that comes your way.