You know the person. Everything just seems to work out for them. Opportunities find them. Good things happen at the right time and they make it look effortless. And you’re over here wondering what they have that you don’t.
I used to be that person. And then I wasn’t. And watching myself go from one to the other taught me more about luck than anything else ever could.
It’s Not What You Think
The easy answer is that lucky people are just positive thinkers. Visualize good things, receive good things. And while mindset is genuinely part of it, that explanation leaves out too much.
The other easy answer is that lucky people just work harder. But that’s not quite right either, and honestly it’s exhausting to even think about.
What I’ve actually seen, in myself and in the people around me, is something quieter than either of those things. Lucky people stay open. They keep showing up, with or without motivation. They don’t shrink. And they spend a lot more time tending their own garden than watching everyone else’s.
That combination, the mindset and the actions and the focus, is where the luck actually lives.
What Happened When I Stopped Being “Lucky”
There was a period of my life when I was genuinely upbeat. Friendly, positive, the kind of person who expected good things and got them. I was building something, my business was growing, opportunities were showing up that I hadn’t planned for, and things were just falling into place in a way that felt almost too good. If I would have had my Side Hustle Garden back then, it would have been big blooming.
Another thing is that I was a little delusional, and I mean that in the best possible way. I genuinely believed nothing was impossible. I wasn’t walking around with a carefully reasoned case for why things would work out. I just assumed they would. There was no ceiling in my mind, and because there was no ceiling, I kept reaching. The serendipitous moments kept coming. The right person would appear at the right time. An idea would turn into something real faster than it had any business doing. It felt like the universe was genuinely conspiring in my favor.
Then life got harder in a few different ways, and I let it change me more than I should have. That part is on me. I made a choice, probably a lot of small choices over time, to shrink. To tone myself down. To trade that wide open energy for something smaller and safer because I thought it would make things easier.
It didn’t. It just made me less. Less open, less hopeful, less magnetic to the things I actually wanted. The serendipitous moments slowed down and eventually mostly stopped, and I spent a long time wondering why before I was honest enough with myself to see what I had done.
I had installed my own ceiling. Nobody did that to me.
I’m working on taking it back down. That’s a big part of what this blog is about.

What Lucky People Are Actually Doing
They’re not doing more. They’re doing things more consistently and from a different internal place.
They notice opportunities because they’re looking for them, not always because they got blessed with better eyesight. When you genuinely expect good things to show up, your brain is primed to catch them. You see the open door that someone else walked right past because they weren’t expecting anything good anyway.
They show up even when it feels pointless. The thing that takes off is almost never the one someone did on a great day with high motivation. It’s usually one of the forty they did anyway, on an ordinary Tuesday when nobody was watching.
And they’re not constantly watching other people’s timelines and feeling behind. That comparison spiral is one of the fastest ways to stop planting. You get so focused on what someone else’s garden looks like that you forget you have one too, and yours has been sitting without water.
I know that one personally.
The Part About Your Own Garden
Lucky people are genuinely more focused on what they’re doing than on what everyone else is doing. Not in a self-absorbed way, in a this-is-where-my-energy-lives way.
Every hour spent measuring your progress against someone else’s is an hour you didn’t spend on your own seeds. And I say that as someone who has lost real time to that spiral. It feels productive because you’re paying attention, but you’re paying attention to the wrong thing.
I also want to say, because it matters: not everyone is starting from the same place. Some people are navigating circumstances that make the whole “just keep planting” message feel tone deaf, and I don’t want to be that blog. If your season right now has very little margin, one small seed still counts. You don’t have to be doing a lot for it to mean something.
Your garden is not their garden. Your timeline is not their timeline. The seeds you need to plant are specific to where you’re trying to go, and nobody else’s growth tells you anything useful about your own.
Tend your own garden. That’s where the luck grows.
Today’s Action
Think about one person in your life who seems consistently lucky. Instead of wondering what they have that you don’t, ask yourself: what are they doing that I’m not doing yet? It’s probably not something big. It’s probably something small they do consistently. See if you can identify it, and then ask yourself if there’s a version of that thing that fits your life right now. That’s your seed for today.

Frequently Asked Questions
Are some people just born luckier than others?
Some people start with more advantages, more resources, more safety nets, more access, and it would be dishonest to pretend that doesn’t affect things. It does. But within whatever circumstances someone is navigating, the mindset and behaviors that create luck are things you can practice. You don’t have to have a lot to plant a seed. You just have to plant what you have, from where you are. And the people who do that consistently tend to see things shift over time, even when the starting point was hard.
What if I’m naturally more of a pessimist? Can I still grow luck?
Yes, and you don’t have to fake being positive to do it. You just have to take the action even when the feeling isn’t there yet. Action builds evidence, and evidence shifts belief over time. You don’t have to feel lucky to plant a seed. You just have to plant it.
I used to feel lucky and now I don’t. What happened?
Something shifted, in your mindset, your environment, your energy, or some combination of all three. It happens to a lot of people, and it happened to me. The fact that you had it once means it’s not gone, it’s just buried. Start small. One seed. Pay attention to what you’re consuming, who you’re spending time with, and honestly, what choices you’ve been making about how much space you’re allowing yourself to take up. Sometimes we install our own ceiling without realizing it. The good news is you can take it back down.
Lucky people aren’t a different species. They’re just doing a few specific things consistently, from a place of genuine openness, while everyone else is watching and wondering.
You already know what your seeds are. Stop watching other people’s gardens and go water yours.
