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Something You Should Know

How to Craft a Luckier Life & Why You Tell Yourself Stories That Aren’t True

Something You Should Know

Mike Carruthers | OmniCastMedia

Science, Self-improvement, Social Sciences, Health & Fitness, Education

4.54.3K Ratings

🗓️ 15 March 2018

⏱️ 43 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

People hate unsolicited advice – and they seldom follow it. Still, that doesn’t stop us from dishing it out to those we are trying to help. Well maybe there is a better and more effective way to influence people other than just telling them what we think they should do. I’ll tell you what it is. (https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/do-the-right-thing/201407/giving-people-advice-rarely-works-does) Some people have all the luck. But why? Why are some people luckier than others? Can you create a life that has more luck in it? Can you be one of those people that other people think of as lucky? Absolutely, says Janice Kaplan. Janice is the former Editor-in-Chief of Parade magazine and her new book is called How Luck Happens: Using the Science of Luck to Transform Work, Love, and Life (http://amzn.to/2Dp0wiH). Janice joins me to discuss how luck really works and how anyone can craft a luckier life. Organic onions, swordfish and gluten-free muffins are just 3 things you shouldn’t buy at the supermarket if you want to save money. I’ll explain why and give you a few other things NOT to buy. (http://www.mc3cb.com/pdf_nutrition_articles/2011_3_8_7%20Worst%20Supermarket%20Rip.pdf) Has this ever happened…? You send an email or leave a voicemail for someone to get back to you – but they don’t. As a result, you start to imagine why they don’t. And the why is usually a negative story. Why do we do this? And how can we stop doing that? Scott Gortno is a therapist and author of the book , The Stories We Tell Ourselves: Stop Jumping to Conclusions. Free Yourself from Anxiety. Transform Your Relationships (http://amzn.to/2DjTHix). Listen as he explains this interesting quirk in human behavior and why it gets us into trouble. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Today on something you should know, people don't like unsolicited advice.

0:06.1

So I have some advice on giving unsolicited advice that works much better.

0:11.1

Then what if you could craft a life that made you luckier?

0:15.0

Where things just go your way?

0:16.9

Very often, people who are the luckiest are actually the people who are the most optimistic

0:23.0

and who are the most positive because they can take an event and they can see the bright

0:27.5

side of it.

0:29.5

Also, a list of things you should not buy at the supermarket that will save you some

0:34.9

real money.

0:36.0

And we all tend to tell ourselves stories, negative stories about why things happen or

0:40.9

don't happen.

0:42.0

And yet,

0:43.0

From the research I did, you know, a good 90% plus of the time these stories that we tell

0:47.2

ourselves aren't true, if a good part of the time, I'm making myself miserable with

0:51.7

these stories that I've got to do my part individually to change this to make my life

0:55.1

better.

0:56.1

And that's all for today on something you should know.

1:00.6

I just learned, discover credit cards do something pretty awesome.

1:05.3

At the end of your first year, they automatically double all the cash back you've earned.

1:10.8

That's right, everything you've earned doubled.

1:13.7

All the cash back from eating at your favorite soup dumpling restaurant?

1:17.7

Doubled.

...

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