Professor Wiseman conducted an interesting experiment
into luck. He recruited a pair of test subjects, Martin and Brenda. Martin
described himself as lucky; Brenda insisted that she was not. Wiseman asked
them to go, at different times, to a coffee shop near his university,
ostensibly to meet someone else involved in the research project; in reality,
they were going to be exposed to identical "chance" opportunities.
Of course the setup was rigged. First, Wiseman had taped
a crisp £5 note to the sidewalk outside the coffee shop. Next, he'd planted
actors at each of the four tables inside. One of the plants was a
"millionaire"; the others were not. Each was instructed to behave in
exactly the same way.
Walking up to the store, Martin immediately spotted the
money on the sidewalk and picked it up. He ordered coffee and took a seat next
to the millionaire. After introducing himself and offering to buy a round of
coffee, Martin found himself engaged in spirited conversation with the man;
soon they were exploring the possibility of doing business together.
Brenda, on the other hand, marched right past the money
without noticing it. She bought her coffee and sat down next to the
millionaire, but they didn't exchange a word.
Later, when asked to describe his day, Martin reported
that he'd been very lucky, finding £5 and meeting an interesting businessman.
Brenda's report: It was an uneventful morning.
"Same opportunities," Wiseman says.
"Different lives."
So why did Martin and Brenda have such different
experiences? "Lucky people create, notice, and act upon the chance
opportunities in their lives," Wiseman notes. If luck means being in the
right place at the right time, he adds, "being in the right place at the
right time is actually all about being in the right state of mind."