I used ‘lucky girl syndrome’ to make more than £1 million

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I used ‘lucky girl syndrome’ to earn over £1m from my jewelery brand, and it can help YOU get what you want too!

  • Stephanie Dunleavy attributes her successes to viral ‘Lucky Girl Syndrome’
  • A million pounds and a jewelery business in the UK are just some of his earnings.
  • She says that she and her partner also have a baby thanks to the technique
  • READ MORE: Could positive thinking help you beat the winter blues?

TikTokers around the world rely on a simple tactic to bring good fortune into their lives, and it’s as easy as simply believing that good things will happen to them.

Nicknamed the Lucky Girl Syndrome, this technique has been praised time and time again for bringing blessings into people’s lives ‘overnight’.

People have attributed professional successes, romantic escapades, and other personal victories to the technique, which in theory is akin to ‘manifesting’: the idea that by thinking, believing and acting in a positive, aspirational way you can have anything and everything. what you want .

And a woman claims that, through her mindset alone, she has been awarded a million pounds, a baby and a successful company.

Stephanie proudly photographed herself wearing an ‘I AM’ t-shirt. She wants to spread the message that those two words are powerful.

Stephanie Dunleavy says the social media trend, with the hashtag #luckygirlsyndrome racking up more than 79.1 million views, has propelled her and her Soul Analyze jewelry company to global success.

In 2017, he founded his company “with £1,000 from his mother-in-law’s living room table.”

“We had nowhere to live at the time,” he told FEMAIL. “I didn’t have the money to market the company or the means to hire someone to help me, but even then I was using ‘Lucky Girl Syndrome’.”

Stephanie recalled how one night, when she “didn’t even have two cents to spare”, she wrote a check to her company in the amount of £1 million.

In 2017, Stephanie Dunleavy (pictured with 1,000 orders) started her company

In 2017, Stephanie Dunleavy (pictured with 1,000 orders) started her company “with £1,000 from her husband’s mum’s front table”.

In 2017, Stephanie (pictured with her partner) started her company

In 2017, Stephanie (pictured with her partner) started her company “with £1,000 from her husband’s mother’s front table.”

Stephanie envisioned launching her brand at House of Fraser.  After using the Lucky Girl Syndrome technique 'for years', Stephanie admits her biggest 'complaint' with the method is her name

Stephanie envisioned launching her brand at House of Fraser. After using the Lucky Girl Syndrome technique ‘for years’, Stephanie admits her biggest ‘complaint’ with the method is her name

Struggling to buy into the hype? These are Stephanie’s best tips…

1. Affirmations are personal statements, so they must be said in the first person. For example, ‘Everything is always working out for me’, ‘I am attracting all kinds of wonderful experiences into my life’

2. They should always be said in the present tense, as if they were already happening

3. It is important not only to pronounce the affirmation, but also to feel it. Harness the emotions of the words being used

4. Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, they must be said with repetition. When I’m working on attracting something into my life, I say the same affirmation hundreds of times a day for at least a month.

She says that simply by believing in herself, her goal came true.

“By 2020, just two and a half years later, my business had turned over £1.5m,” he said.

Your company Soul Analyze – a statement jewelery brand – has been worn by style guru Gok Wan and has had ‘hundreds of thousands of customers’ ever since.

“And as a result, I’ve gotten exposure in the global press like Forbes and all the national newspapers,” Stephanie revealed. ‘I left school at 16 with zero grades and worked in telesales. Some might have thought my future looked bleak, but I knew great things were ahead of me.’

The jewelry brand owner says it’s not just about commercial success: Lucky Girl Syndrome has helped with personal issues.

“I struggled to get pregnant for years but never sought outside medical help because I knew it would happen to me,” she revealed. “I found a photo of me and my husband holding a baby and looked at it receptively for months.”

Stephanie then says that she got pregnant after trying for three years, all through the power of belief and manifestation.

After using the Lucky Girl Syndrome technique ‘for years’, Stephanie admits that her biggest ‘complaint’ with the method is her name.

“It has NOTHING to do with luck,” he insisted. “It’s the law of assumption: when you expect it to happen, it will surely happen.”