TikTok has an amazing way of recycling the exact same aesthetics and trends, haphazardly giving them new names and calling them new. It’s a TikTok trend that says the phrase.And as the Lucky Girl Syndrome prophecy states, they So lucky, and all it will work out for them.
Some TikTok users have called Lucky Girl Syndrome “delusional” and “smug.” One particularly bizarre aspect of Lucky Girl Syndrome that sets it apart from other manifesting epidemics is that it is inherently nebulous. Every video you click under the #luckygirlsyndrome hashtag says some version of the exact same thing: “I’m so lucky.”
The trend really took off after TikTok user @lauragalebe posted a video describing himself as “one of the luckiest people.” [she] know. ”
“I always expect great things to happen to me, and they do.” she says in the videoShe adds that it wasn’t until she “believed with all her heart” that these wonderful things started happening to her. Because I truly believe that it will happen to me… just fantasize for a month and tell me if your life doesn’t change.”
As @lauragalebe explains in her later video on the topic, Lucky Girl Syndrome is a condition that is essentially luck-focused. And, as we learned from the past dozen symptoms, Manifestation tends to work best with people who are already deeply privileged.
“Depending on who you ask, is it a practice that empowers you to achieve your dreams by affirming every day that things like ‘everything works out for me,’ or is it the non-inclusive and toxic rich white social media trend? Either girls who don’t check their privileges.” executive career coach Lisa Quinn said Harper’s Bazaar of tendency.
It’s simply a new version of a ten-year-old book. secret, This was the first touted the magic of the manifesto, which is supposed to be life-changing. An incarnation may contain many rules or virtually none. For example, one old TikTok told me about a script. Another trend instructed us to follow the “Angel Numbers”.
Of course, there is nothing wrong with positive thinking. Gabriele Ettingen, a German academic and professor of psychology at NYU, said: who wrote Rethinking Positive Thinking: Inside the New Science of Motivation told Vox “The more positively people dream about the future, the better they feel in the present. with, they actually become more depressed.
Unfortunately, the Lucky Girl Syndrome trend is unlikely to go away anytime soon: TikTok creates a new version of the manifesto trend every few months. Let’s look at this again.Maybe because the trend sticks The gap between rich and poor is deepening, recession is loomingit was lonely than ever, and everything feels completely out of our control. When nothing in our physical world seems to distort our goals, why do we look to something like manifestation, an answer from the universe, to heal our fears? It’s wise.
Until the world begins to settle, I spend my time predicting the next version of what is called the lucky girl syndrome.