Who Knew? Lucky Charms Actually Work

horseshoe
horseshoe

Assay: I've been thinking a lot lately about superstition.

Superstition is the irrational belief that an object or behavior has the power to influence an outcome, when there's no logical connection between them.

Most of us aren't superstitious-but most of us are a littlestitious.

Relying on lucky charms is superstitious, but in fact, it actually works. Researchers have found that people who believe they have luck on their side feel greater "self-efficacy"-the belief that we're capable of doing what we set out to do-and this belief actually boosts mental and physical performance. Many elite athletes, for instance, are deeply superstitious, and in one study, people who were told that a golf ball "has turned out to be a lucky ball" did better putting than people who weren't told that.

Any discussion of superstition reminds me of a perhaps-apocryphal story that I love, about physicist Niels Bohr. Bohr noticed that a friend had a horseshoe mailed above the door, and he asked why. When told that it brought luck, he asked in astonishment, "Do you really believe in this?" His friend replied, "Oh, I don't believe in it. But I am told it works even if you don't believe in it." (You can watch me tell the story in this video.)

To help herself quit drinking, a friend told me, she explicitly invoked the idea of luck. "I told myself, 'The lucky parts of my life have been when I wasn't drinking, so I need to stop drinking to get my luck back.'"

How about you? Do you have a lucky object, lucky ritual, or lucky item that you wear? I have a lucky perfume. I love beautiful smells, but I save one of my favorite perfumes to wear only when I feel like I need some extra luck.

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Also ...

  • Are you interested in launching a group for people doing happiness projects together? These groups have sprung up all over the world, and one of my favorite things on my book tour was to meet some of the groups. Intrigued? Email me, and I'll send you the "starter kit." Read more here.