Everyone dreams of winning the lottery, and most of us think of it as just a matter of luck – combinations of numbers, and matching our birth date, and other details that, obviously, have no bearing on who we are, or indeed if we are likely to win.

It’s these kinds of exponential thinking that leads people to set up their own “lottery secret” – a system of numbers or a progression of numbers generated by their own method of choosing them or something that might give them an unfair advantage in the betting or gambling.

If you’ve read the book, or even watched the film – you know that the systems these authors claim to have uncovered – are already being used by governments and large corporations alike. They are being used to predict or predict stock prices, or currency values, or letting you know when and where to bet – all in the name of profits for a profit.

So if it’s this easy to predict the numbers – why is it that some of these systems only offer you small gains, or even negative income?

Because they actually rely on you buying the product to increase your chances of winning.

If you’ve been to a casino, you know that the word “remipoker” is associated with the word “orem” – or the lack of it. The reason why you can’t win at slots is because the casino has convinced you that it doesn’t know the game better than you do. They have convinced you that it’s impossible to beat the slot machine, or to win on the consecutive coin spins, or even on the multiple pay lines. They could do all of these things – but they don’t because they already know the game inside out.

The same thing goes for these lottery systems. They may be great at predicting the numbers – but they know the games intimately. They know that the random selection of numbers is a pure luck event, and that the particular sequence of numbers aren’t likely to come up again. They know that lotteries are inevitably exposed to the element of human error – and that massive changes to the playing environment can occur with the roll of a lever, or the toss of a ball. They know that pitted against the house – the lottery is at least a game of chance, if not entirely random.

They also know that people will consistently choose sequences like 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 as their first numbers when forming their lotto combination. Such sequences are familiar popularly used in referring to a particular set of numbers – and perhaps for good reason too. Perhaps a sequence like 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10 is accurate too, but if you will look at the mathematical odds , or probability of an accurate sequence, it’s actually quite a high probability that you’ll struck the correct combination out if you keep it up.

So that’s it then – the secret of how to win the lottery is to follow the pattern already outlined, and to ensure that you always choose your first numbers from that base. Consider the sequence previously outline, and ensure that you always use it as your first numbers when betting. Whether at the lottery outlet, or elsewhere, ensure that you always use the base numbers as your first two choices when you formulate your lotto combination.

It sounds like common sense, doesn’t it? But you’d be amazed at the number of people who ignore this most basic of primitive notion, and instead spring every time out of it in some vague way, whether in a lottery ticket or over a beer. They might as well have written the numbers themselves, or might even have been writing them in a long-play bingo, or letting the computer choose random numbers for them.

Consider if you had a machine that would choose random numbers for you – would you use it? I doubt it. So why do we use this machine to tell us when to let go of our numbers? Because it doesn’t matter. We’ve told the machine to choose random numbers, not to choose the most likely ones. So if the numbers haven’t been chosen yet, it’s randomising the sequence again.

Are You Really Going to Use That Machine?

If you really want to win the lotto, you might think that you’d use a bit of intelligence too. And go for some good information rather than good fortune. Although there are some truly random numbers, there’s a mighty big chance that the numbers 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 will never appear. Lottery wheels often have numbers bunched up, or broken into two or three parts. Even the best-handicappers can’t promise that the next winning combination will be all black or all red, or even that it will be a mathematician’s ball, like choosing 3 even numbers from 2 less than 21.