The
secret of being born lucky is a summer birthday, with May babies
most likely to enjoy a lifetime's good fortune, according to a
study of more than 40,000 people.
The time of year at which you are born has an enduring
influence on levels of optimism and self-reported luck, according
to research by British and Swedish scientists.
May was the luckiest month in which to be born, with 50 per cent
of those born then considering themselves lucky, while October
was the least lucky month, with just 43 per cent claiming good
fortune.
The findings add to growing evidence that the phenomenon of luck
is not all down to chance, but is affected by a person's general
disposition.
Other research has shown that whether people think themselves
fortunate depends less on objective success than on having a "glass
half-full" or "half-empty" approach to life.
"What we are seeing suggests that something is influencing
how people perceive their luckiness. My hypothesis
is that people create their own luck by traits
such as optimism, that luck is a psychological phenomenon rather
than a matter of blind chance," said Professor Richard Wiseman,
who led the research,.
The pattern of the results, with those born in spring and summer
reporting themselves luckier than those born in autumn or winter,
could have two potential explanations, Professor Wiseman said.
"One theory is a medical, physiological one, that the temperature
at the time of birth might influence the development of the brain,
particularly neurotransmitter chemicals," he said. "The
pattern is the same as that you see in the depression literature:
people born in the winter are statistically more likely to suffer
from depression, and we may be seeing the same effect here."
"The other strong possibility is that mother-infant interactions
are affected by seasonal factors. There is more post-natal
depression in the winter, and mothers who suffer from this don't
interact with their children in the same way. It's possible that
this affects the psychological complexion
of their children later in life."
(Agencies)