You can't be lucky forever, nor can you be unlucky forever.
It's just the probability of things happening. People think it's complicated.
If the plane crashes, you are still alive, and you just meet some conditions in the survival probability, then you are lucky. You can say that you are lucky enough because you saved your life.
In billiards, you want to hit a target ball and miss it, but you hit another target ball. That's just a crooked hit, not luck, because you can't hit all the balls like this, and you can be lucky if you hit them all. The probability is basically zero.
You must find out what luck is. Good luck is a description of the high probability of unexpected things happening at the same time that are beneficial to you. To put it bluntly, it is probability.
Generally speaking, excluding subjective factors, the probability of being lucky and unlucky should be similar (just like tossing a coin, 50% heads and 50% tails, I can't explain why there is such a probability, which is similar to the law of nature). Why do you think some people are lucky and some people are unlucky? If you happen to be in the probability of a plane crash, it should be an unlucky probability, and you paid for it with your life, so to outsiders, your luck is very, very bad, because there is no luck without life. If you are lucky, you just scored the wrong goal. No one says you are lucky, but when you are lucky, you win the lottery. Of course, others think you are lucky and the money is too easy.
In other words, if you may win the lottery and your plane crashes first on the way back, are you lucky or unlucky? It should be unfortunate, because if you lose your life, even if you should be lucky in the future, it will disappear. If you were not in an airplane accident, but in a bicycle accident, then you are certainly lucky. Bicycles won't kill you, and you can also enjoy the lucky draw. People will think you are lucky.
Planes always crash, and people always die when they crash. Can these dead people call themselves unlucky? Maybe there will be more luck waiting for them in the future, such as winning the lottery. They just won the unfortunate probability that they would lose their lives. Probability does not distinguish between people. It doesn't matter whether you are lucky or not. It just happens, and then someone will be unfortunate.
Luck is not a real thing, but an abstract concept, so it is of course related to people's subjective judgment. If you think you are lucky, then you are lucky or unlucky. There is no standard. You may feel lucky to be a survivor of an airplane accident, but how do you know that you will not go bankrupt or die of other diseases in the future? Life can't last forever. Because it is a probability, it is only temporary, not lifelong (if a person dies in an accident, it can be understood that bad luck is lifelong, because he died). The probability of great happiness in a person's life is very small. The probability of luck and misfortune is equal. It's just that what happens in this probability is different. This is a non-human and non-subjective factor.
So if you are lucky, can you control yourself? I think so, too. It varies from person to person. If you sit in the back of the plane accident, you may survive (excluding the case of falling into the sea). If you drive with your seat belt on, you may crash this time and you won't die. Then people think you are lucky. If you have the habit of drunk driving, you will kill others. Looks like you're super unlucky. Therefore, the quality of luck can not rule out human subjective factors. The subjective factor is that after we consider and analyze, the probability of it happening (not happening) is high. If a highway often crashes and kills people, you should not take this road, because there is a high probability of death, and forcing you to go will increase your chances of bad luck. If you never fly or take a bus, there will naturally be fewer accidents. That's it.
Luck is the probability of luck. As for what will happen, it will happen randomly. If it happens well, it means good luck.
The occurrence of random things in probability may involve another more complicated problem, fate.
Everyone has his own life. As for why he was involved in the plane crash and why he won the lottery, there is no explanation, if you believe in life. But luck itself is probability.
The probability cannot be accurately controlled. What we can do is how to ensure the maximum probability. Good or bad luck can be transformed into each other, not absolute, depending on where you look at it. This is the product of active brain thinking. Of course, different people have different opinions. Anyway, I understand that luck is like this.