“If you, like most people answered that you want to attract Good Luck, get CROKEN today, believe in its power to attract Good Luck and start attracting Good Luck to yourself.”
For as long as humans have walked the Earth, frogs have been here. In fact, they have inhabited the Earth for over 200 million years. Scientists have even found a 40-million-year old frog fossil in Antarctica. Thus, frogs and toads have been the subject of mythologies and folklore for people around the world for centuries.
In many cultures particularly in China, Japan and Korea the frog is a symbol of fertility, potential and prosperity, and as a result the frog is believed to be a natural symbol of good luck.
Croken was created as a good luck charm that can be held securely and safely in a digital account which we provide Free. No worries about leaving it at home, losing it or misplacing it. A Lucky Charm appropriate for the modern age, supporting you 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year.
All you need is just one genuine Croken and belief in its power to attract good luck to yourself. We believe that it’s important not to allow anyone to hoard all the good luck… so we restrict purchase to just one Croken per person.
Since people benefit more when they give, we ask all of the more than 100 million people who are expected to own Croken, to meditate for a few minutes every day to ask the Universe to grant all Croken holders Good Luck. This is a powerful magnetic force that works miracles.
CROKEN is a Digital Good Luck Charm that people buy and hold in a digital account which we provide FREE. They get Croken to attract Good Luck into their lives.
Successful people owe much more to LUCK than we thought: Being smart and talented ISN’T enough, say scientists.
New research has now proved that being smart and talented alone isn’t enough to make you successful. Instead, the world’s wealthiest and most successful people are the luckiest.
Chengwei Lau of Warwick Business School said: ‘For example, Bill Gates’s upper-class background enabled him to gain extra programming experience when less than 0.01 per cent of his generation then had access to computers.’
‘His mother’s social connection with IBM’s chairman enabled him to gain a contract from the then leading PC company, generating a lock-in effect that was crucial for establishing the Microsoft software empire.’ Other successful people have also admitted that luck played a big part in their success.
Download Full Research here…