PSI Online Helps in Defining Luck and Juggling the Art of Jealousy

People seem to have a love-hate relationship with luck. When they have it, they love it. When they don’t, it becomes their biggest curse. Luck is kind of like a cloud. Sure, it is there and one can see it from afar. But, as soon as they get close it evaporates and simply stills into the world. It cannot be touched. It cannot be measured (ignoring weather science, which goes beyond the point here). The bottom line is that luck is almost mythical and untouchable.

So why do people get so obsessed over managing it? They get jealous when others have great luck, and they believe that they never have any luck. Some would argue that simply being born healthy is luck in itself, but that is not enough to weigh a life on. Emotions weigh heavy, and the trials of life keep people from looking at the simple things.

Jealousy is a poison directly born of luck because jealousy typically occurs when others are unjustifiably rewarded with a little luck. Think of a former friend who maybe deserves to get their comeuppance. One can find many examples when they connect with PSI Seminars. Regardless of what they did, they win it huge (financially, relationship-wise, it really does not matter). This instills a sense of jealousy. They don’t deserve that? Yet, they got it. That is just how luck works.

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The truth is that their success has no effect on how the other may live. The friend is a former friend. They only affect the other person emotionally, and one can be sure that their bout of luck has kept the other person out of their thoughts. The point is that the jealousy does nothing to the other person, and only hurts the person who is jealous. It is an art form because it means managing something without it becoming overwhelming. It is okay to be jealous. What is not okay is having that jealousy overwhelm and distract. There will always be someone to be jealous of, and luck chooses no sides.

Reach out to PSI Seminars podcasts and find others struggling with these same issues. There are patterns everywhere, and those struggling with personal bouts of luck and jealousy can find others that have done the same exact thing.

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