TikTok has a remarkable way of recycling the exact same aesthetics and Philippines erotictrends, haphazardly slapping a new name on it, and calling it something new. The latest manifestation dupe is Lucky Girl Syndrome, a TikTok trend in which users say the phrase, "I am so lucky; everything works out for me." And, as the Lucky Girl Syndrome prophecy states, they will be solucky, and everythingwill work out for them.
Some TikTok users are calling Lucky Girl Syndrome "delusional" and "smug." It encourages people — particularly young women — to bring luck into their lives through positive thinking. One particularly weird aspect of the Lucky Girl Syndrome that sets it apart from other manifestation fads is how inherently vague it is. Every video you click under the #luckygirlsyndrome hashtag says some version of the exact same thing: "I am so lucky."
The trend really took off after TikTok user @lauragalebe posted a video describing herself as "one of the luckiest people [she] knows."
"I just always expect great things to happen to me and so they do," she says in the video. She adds that it wasn't until she "genuinely believed" that these great things started happening to her. "And I wouldn't even call it toxic positivity because I genuinely believe that like the best things just happen to me… Try being delusional for a month and tell me if your life doesn't change."
As @lauragalebe explains in her later videos on the topic, Lucky Girl Syndrome is essentially manifesting that is focused on luck. And, as we've learned from the past dozen manifestation trends, manifestation tends to work best on people who are already deeply privileged.
"Depending on who you ask, it’s either an empowering practice that can see you fulfill your dreams by repeating daily affirmations such as, 'Everything works out well for me,' or it’s a non-inclusive, toxic social media trend of rich, white girls not checking their own privilege," executive career coach Lisa Quinn told Harper's Bazaarof thetrend.
SEE ALSO: TikTok brings new life to the Old InternetIt's simply a new version of the decade-old book, The Secret,which first touted the alleged life-changing magic of manifestation. Manifestation can involve a whole host of rules or it can involve practically none. For instance, one old TikTok taught us about scripting, in which people repeatedly write down a wish until it comes true; another trend told us to follow our "angel numbers," something that sounds complicated but that I refuse to investigate.
There's nothing wrong with positive thinking, of course. German academic and NYU psychology professor Gabriele Oettingen, who wrote Rethinking Positive Thinking: Inside the New Science of Motivation told Voxthat “the more positively people dream about the future, the better they feel at the moment. People relax and their blood pressure goes down. But you need the energy to implement your wishes, and over time, they actually get more depressed, partly because they’re putting in less effort and have less success."
Unfortunately, it's unlikely that the Lucky Girl Syndrome trend will go away any time soon. TikTok creates a new version of the manifestation trend every few months; we'll see this again. Maybe the trend sticks around because the wealth gap is deepening, a recession is looming, we're lonelier than ever, and everything feels completely out of our control. It's only sensible that we'd look to something like manifestation — an answer from the universe — to heal our fears when nothing in our physical world seems to be contorting to our goals.
Until the world begins to calm, I'll be spending my time anticipating what we'll call the next version of the Lucky Girl Syndrome.
New White House website makes it even harder to find informationHow to be the most insufferable person at your ugly Christmas sweater partyMinion steals part of guy's lawn then tags him on FacebookPorgs take over Facebook in new 'Last Jedi' gameSeas level rise may be twice earlier estimates, dooming coastal citiesDisney buys 21st Century Fox to go to war with Netflix and Amazon'Resident Evil 7' was the buzziest game of 2017Amazon to sell Apple TV, Google Chromecast streaming devicesCarrie Fisher's dog loved 'The Last Jedi' and we're cryingHands on with Apple Maps indoor mapping at JFK airportSomewhere in Las Vegas, there's a warehouse containing debris from UFOs5 rules for Star Wars spoilers to get ready for 'The Last Jedi'Amazon Prime members now get free sameThe dude about to kill Net Neutrality thinks a dumb video will get you on his sideDisney and Netflix are battling for your kids' attention — and your walletNew White House website makes it even harder to find information'The Simpsons' predicted Disney owning Fox back in 1998Artificial intelligence in 2017 still can't truly understand humans'Harlem Shake' creator Baauer takes on FCC for net neutrality videoAmerican Airlines tried to charge a mother $150 for traveling with breast milk James Webb Space Telescope image shows trippy new view of Jupiter and its auroras NYT's The Mini crossword answers for June 13 Ancient megalodon was so huge it could eat orcas, scientists say Apple AirPods 2 on sale: Get the second Fat bears of Alaska are already really fat, footage shows NASA just revealed the wild spots it'll land astronauts on the moon Best Amazon Deal: The Amazon Echo Dot Kids is on sale for under $35 at Amazon. What we'll see when NASA crashes into an asteroid on purpose Thai PM encourages scrutiny of Temu after e Apple sales decline in China, as company talks with regulators over AI features · TechNode iOS 18 release date: When does it come out? James Webb captures evidence of carbon dioxide in exoplanet atmosphere Best soundbar deal: Score the Bose TV Speaker soundbar for its lowest price at Amazon At NASA, some dread mega the moon rocket having to return to its hangar West Indies vs. Afghanistan 2024 livestream: Watch T20 World Cup for free Patagonia founder Yvon Chouinard gives away $3 billion company to fight climate change Huawei and Baidu stockpile Samsung HBM chips as US export restrictions loom: report · TechNode England vs. Oman 2024 livestream: Watch T20 World Cup for free Best Buy TV deals: Snag a TV for $139.99 NASA lets you hear the sound of black hole
2.3259s , 8223.2265625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Philippines erotic】,Creation Information Network