A harmlessly charming belief to impart to an impressionable six-year-old, you might think. How- ever, my fascination with examining nature's details quickly turned into a motivated search for the elusive four-leaf clover. When I couldn't find one. I assumed it meant that I was unlucky. I decided that only some imaginary being more special than myself would be able to find such a lucky omen. With that, my self-worth took a nose dive. Further, the implication in the belief about four-leaf clovers being lucky was that good luck was rare, a belief I also adopted.
One day I actually found a four-leaf clover, but the avalanche of mental questions and fears that arose around the lucky discovery tarnished the moment. "Does this mean I will always be lucky? How will I know the luck is coming true? Maybe the luck only lasts until the clover wilts.
Once my mind became exhausted with contemplating the possibilities, I promptly forgot about finding the four-leaf clover. Because I had not defined my luck
in terms of an expected result, I
Many years later I took The Avatar Course, and I realized I create my own luck. I came to know that luck is a subjective phenomenon. Good and bad luck are just different viewpoints of the same reality. One person wins the lottery and feels unlucky because his family quarrels over how to spend the money, and they end up alienated from each other. Another person feels lucky because an accident that left her in a wheel chair caused her to open to her spiritual nature in a big way for the first time.
Today, even in my toughest moments, a deep part of me knows I have created an opportunity to grow. For that I believe, "I am lucky now." Avatar Overdrive In This Issue Previous Next
|