The Good Fortune Show with Sugandhi Iyer

The Good Fortune Show, July 3, 2026

59 min · 4. juli 2026
episode The Good Fortune Show, July 3, 2026 cover

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The Good Fortune Show with Iyer Fearless Fortune, Personal Independence, and the Energy of Success Letting Go of the Fear of Messing Up In this episode of The Good Fortune Show, host Sugandhii Iyer begins by reflecting on the small fears that can stop people from moving forward, especially the fear of misspeaking, making a public mistake, or stumbling in front of others. She tells the story of a school friend who tripped during a beauty competition and cried afterward, but later went on to have a successful and fortunate life. Sugandhii uses the story to argue that a single blunder does not define a person’s future, and that fear of failure should not keep anyone frozen in place. America’s 250 Years as a Symbol of Moving Forward Sugandhii connects the theme of fearlessness to the United States approaching its 250th anniversary of independence. She reads and spells the word “semiquincentennial,” openly admitting uncertainty about how to pronounce it, which reinforces her larger point that it is fine to continue even when a person is unsure or imperfect. She praises the United States as one of the most successful countries in the world and wishes listeners a heartfelt happy Fourth of July, encouraging them to watch fireworks, enjoy time with loved ones, and celebrate personal independence. Personal Success and the Energy of a Successful Country The episode then expands into the relationship between national success and personal success. Sugandhii says that when a country is doing well, its people can feel proud and energetically connected to that success. At the same time, she returns to an idea she has shared before: personal independence matters, and people should not allow the ups and downs of a country to control their own inner universe. She balances national pride with personal responsibility, saying people can celebrate the success of the United States while still maintaining their own individual energy and direction. Family Energy, India, Las Vegas, and Belonging Sugandhii shares personal reflections on why she has spent so much time in India after living what she describes as a “cushy” life in Las Vegas. She says the pull of family energy brought her back, along with the ancient architecture, temples, incense, elephants, monkeys, peacocks, and the atmosphere of India. She contrasts the glamour and beauty of Las Vegas with the deep emotional and ancestral connection she feels in India, using this as an example of how success is not only financial or external, but also tied to family, memory, place, and personal energy. Law of Attraction and the Power of Vibration A major teaching section focuses on the law of attraction. Sugandhii clarifies an earlier point by saying that both the law of attraction and the individual have “ultimate say” in different ways. The law of attraction responds to dominant vibration, but people control the vibration they release. She gives the example of searching for her own shows online and seeing AI describe The Joyful Manifestation Show and The Good Fortune Show as acclaimed, which she interprets as a reflection of some vibration she may have been sending out. Her main point is that people should deliberately choose the energy they project because the universe responds to it. Affirmations, Money, Parking Spots, and Manifestation In the inserted teaching segment, Sugandhii explains how simple affirmations can grow from noticing small positive events. She tells a story about imagining her aunt giving her money and then actually receiving a stack of high-denomination notes. From that experience, she builds the affirmation, “Money comes to me all the time.” She also discusses affirmations for parking spots, success, and money, stressing that the affirmation voice should be gentle and blended with a person’s energy rather than loud or forceful. She encourages listeners to see themselves as “great manifesters” and to notice small signs of good fortune so those patterns can expand. Rising Above Bad Scripts and Building Inner Power The final portion centers on emotional empowerment. Sugandhii reads from her book about moving away from personality fears and toward the true self, saying that changing the inner psychological world directly affects the external world. She uses the example of “fictitious Jane” feeling unwanted by “fictitious John” to explain how negative situations can be treated as bad scripts rather than ultimate truth. She urges listeners to doubt the negative instead of doubting the positive. She then distinguishes inner empowerment from unsafe risk-taking, using a personal story about refusing to walk past a stray dog near an ATM in India. She closes by saying the mind needs its own immune system, a topic she plans to discuss in the next show.

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episode The Good Fortune Show, July 17, 2026 artwork

The Good Fortune Show, July 17, 2026

The Good Fortune Show with Iyer Good Fortune Through Gratitude Protecting the Mind and Growing With Joy Defining Good Fortune and the Right People at the Right Time In this episode of The Good Fortune Show, host Sugandhii Iyer begins by defining good fortune as the experience of receiving good things, having good things happen, and meeting the right people at the right time. She explains that someone does not have to be morally perfect in every area of life to be the right person for a specific opportunity, using the example of “fictitious Jane” receiving a professional music contract from “fictitious Joan.” The key, in Sugandhii’s teaching, is that enough goodness must be present for the situation to unfold properly, safely, and legally. Building a Mental Immune System Sugandhii introduces the idea that the mind, like the body, needs an immune system. She says this “mental immune system” should be strong enough to detect and ward away unnecessary negative energy. To illustrate this, she describes fictitious Jane living in a housing complex where she feels protected by gates, security guards, locks, windows, and an alarm system. Sugandhii uses this as a metaphor for the inner belief that negative forces cannot enter when one feels properly protected and fortunate. The Singer, the Mother, and the Law of Attraction A major teaching example comes from a film Sugandhii recently watched about a talented classical singer trained by her famous mother. The daughter resents living in her mother’s shadow, leaves home, joins a pop group, and wins a local award, only to discover that her mother has received a much larger national award on the same day. Sugandhii interprets this as an example of the law of attraction, saying the daughter’s years of resentment and lack of gratitude toward her mother were reflected back through circumstances that made her feel overshadowed again. In contrast, Sugandhii says gratitude toward the mother, her training, and her inherited gifts could have produced a different energetic outcome. Gratitude, Genetics, and Becoming the Master of Thought After the break, Sugandhii continues the gratitude theme, even using the sound of a peacock outside as an example of beauty inherited through nature. She says people should recognize what is special about their family, genetics, training, and gifts rather than resent the source of those gifts. She then references Dr. Joe Vitale and teachings associated with The Secret, emphasizing awareness of thoughts, meditation, and the intention “I am the master of my thoughts.” Sugandhii explains that manifestation is not only about receiving material things but also about becoming the kind of person who naturally receives, succeeds, and feels grateful. Grateful Happiness Versus Unhappy Empowerment Sugandhii distinguishes between empowerment and happiness, saying a person can feel powerful without truly being happy or grateful. She uses The Bold and the Beautiful as an example, discussing characters who make moves from resentment, deprivation, or power struggles rather than natural joyful growth. In her view, empowerment fueled by lack or discontentment is not the same as joyful manifestation. True growth, she says, should come from joy, gratitude, and natural expansion rather than from the desire to prove something or retaliate. Positive Thoughts, Time Delay, and Moving With Grace Sugandhii then draws from The Secret again, referencing Lisa Nichols on the value of time delay and Michael Bernard Beckwith on the stronger power of affirmative thought. She reassures listeners that they should not fear every past negative thought, because positive thoughts and affirmations can begin working for them now. She encourages people to proclaim that their good thoughts are powerful and their negative thoughts are weak. Whether changing relationships, jobs, homes, or life circumstances, Sugandhii says the movement should happen with grace rather than anger, resentment, or hostility toward the past. Organic Growth and Gratitude as the Fuel The episode closes by applying the same principle to money, identity, national pride, and personal progress. Sugandhii explains that if someone has $50,000 and hears a neighbor has $500,000, the answer is not to resent the $50,000 but to stay grateful and naturally grow toward the next level. She similarly says someone can be proud of being Indian and focus on the good while moving toward progress, rather than directing energy into resentment. Her final message is that whatever change listeners want to make, the fuel for growth should be gratefulness, not ungratefulness. She closes by directing listeners to her book Joyful Manifestation on Amazon and signs off until the next Friday show.

Yesterday53 min
episode The Good Fortune Show, July 3, 2026 artwork

The Good Fortune Show, July 3, 2026

The Good Fortune Show with Iyer Fearless Fortune, Personal Independence, and the Energy of Success Letting Go of the Fear of Messing Up In this episode of The Good Fortune Show, host Sugandhii Iyer begins by reflecting on the small fears that can stop people from moving forward, especially the fear of misspeaking, making a public mistake, or stumbling in front of others. She tells the story of a school friend who tripped during a beauty competition and cried afterward, but later went on to have a successful and fortunate life. Sugandhii uses the story to argue that a single blunder does not define a person’s future, and that fear of failure should not keep anyone frozen in place. America’s 250 Years as a Symbol of Moving Forward Sugandhii connects the theme of fearlessness to the United States approaching its 250th anniversary of independence. She reads and spells the word “semiquincentennial,” openly admitting uncertainty about how to pronounce it, which reinforces her larger point that it is fine to continue even when a person is unsure or imperfect. She praises the United States as one of the most successful countries in the world and wishes listeners a heartfelt happy Fourth of July, encouraging them to watch fireworks, enjoy time with loved ones, and celebrate personal independence. Personal Success and the Energy of a Successful Country The episode then expands into the relationship between national success and personal success. Sugandhii says that when a country is doing well, its people can feel proud and energetically connected to that success. At the same time, she returns to an idea she has shared before: personal independence matters, and people should not allow the ups and downs of a country to control their own inner universe. She balances national pride with personal responsibility, saying people can celebrate the success of the United States while still maintaining their own individual energy and direction. Family Energy, India, Las Vegas, and Belonging Sugandhii shares personal reflections on why she has spent so much time in India after living what she describes as a “cushy” life in Las Vegas. She says the pull of family energy brought her back, along with the ancient architecture, temples, incense, elephants, monkeys, peacocks, and the atmosphere of India. She contrasts the glamour and beauty of Las Vegas with the deep emotional and ancestral connection she feels in India, using this as an example of how success is not only financial or external, but also tied to family, memory, place, and personal energy. Law of Attraction and the Power of Vibration A major teaching section focuses on the law of attraction. Sugandhii clarifies an earlier point by saying that both the law of attraction and the individual have “ultimate say” in different ways. The law of attraction responds to dominant vibration, but people control the vibration they release. She gives the example of searching for her own shows online and seeing AI describe The Joyful Manifestation Show and The Good Fortune Show as acclaimed, which she interprets as a reflection of some vibration she may have been sending out. Her main point is that people should deliberately choose the energy they project because the universe responds to it. Affirmations, Money, Parking Spots, and Manifestation In the inserted teaching segment, Sugandhii explains how simple affirmations can grow from noticing small positive events. She tells a story about imagining her aunt giving her money and then actually receiving a stack of high-denomination notes. From that experience, she builds the affirmation, “Money comes to me all the time.” She also discusses affirmations for parking spots, success, and money, stressing that the affirmation voice should be gentle and blended with a person’s energy rather than loud or forceful. She encourages listeners to see themselves as “great manifesters” and to notice small signs of good fortune so those patterns can expand. Rising Above Bad Scripts and Building Inner Power The final portion centers on emotional empowerment. Sugandhii reads from her book about moving away from personality fears and toward the true self, saying that changing the inner psychological world directly affects the external world. She uses the example of “fictitious Jane” feeling unwanted by “fictitious John” to explain how negative situations can be treated as bad scripts rather than ultimate truth. She urges listeners to doubt the negative instead of doubting the positive. She then distinguishes inner empowerment from unsafe risk-taking, using a personal story about refusing to walk past a stray dog near an ATM in India. She closes by saying the mind needs its own immune system, a topic she plans to discuss in the next show.

4. juli 202659 min
episode The Good Fortune Show, June 19, 2026 artwork

The Good Fortune Show, June 19, 2026

The Good Fortune Show with Iyer The Peacock, the Suite, and the Power of Easy Good Fortune Good Fortune Between Joyful Manifestation In this episode of The Good Fortune Show, host Sugandhii Iyer explains that the program alternates with The Joyful Manifestation Show so listeners have uplifting, positive, spiritually aligned content every week. She positions The Good Fortune Show as a place to focus on good energy, manifestation, appreciation, beauty, and the practical ways people can align themselves with fortune rather than negativity. A Peacock Appears as a Sign of Beauty and Fortune Early in the episode, Sugandhii notices a peacock walking outside her window and treats the moment as a living symbol of good fortune. She explains that a strip of bushes and trees was left by nearby construction, allowing peacocks to continue living there. The sight of the bird becomes a meditation on nature, the need for animals to have a home, and the unexpected joy of witnessing beauty in its natural element. For Sugandhii, seeing the peacock from where she sits is itself an example of good fortune. Nature, Construction, and the Cost of Development The peacock also leads Sugandhii to reflect on how construction affects land, birds, animals, and natural habitats. She notes that the area around her home once had much more greenery, but construction has changed the landscape. At the same time, the remaining strip of bushes has become a refuge for the peacocks. This brief reflection connects the show’s spiritual message to a grounded concern: progress and development often come at a cost to nature, even when small pockets of beauty remain. The Peacock as a Lesson in Natural Beauty Sugandhii uses the peacock as a metaphor for beauty, confidence, and self-acceptance. She says a peacock is beautiful as it is and does not need to change itself to become beautiful. From there, she criticizes the pressure people feel to alter their faces, skin, noses, lips, or bodies to match someone else’s idea of attractiveness. Her message is that each person can affirm, “I am beautiful just the way I am,” and that this belief changes the vibration a person carries into the world. Celebrity Beauty, Cosmetic Changes, and Original Quality Sugandhii discusses public figures such as Priyanka Chopra Jonas and Michael Jackson as examples of people who, in her view, changed physical features that were already beautiful. She says Priyanka Chopra was originally beautiful but, through cosmetic changes, lost some of her natural look. She also says Michael Jackson was already beautiful and uniquely talented before his appearance changed. Her larger point is not simply about celebrities, but about honoring one’s original quality and trusting that God or divine creation did not make a mistake. Manifestation on the Train Sugandhii shares an example from a recent train ride after returning from a cruise. She says she had been concerned about food hygiene, especially servers touching bowls and cutlery. Shortly after she expressed this concern to her mother, a server brought the bowls and spoons in a way that allowed passengers to choose their own. Sugandhii interprets this as a quick manifestation: her desire for a more hygienic serving method appeared almost immediately in front of her. Knowing When Not to Spend Manifestation Energy The train story leads to a deeper teaching about when to use one’s manifestation energy. Sugandhii says that while her wish briefly improved the serving situation, it was not enough to permanently change the larger system. She compares this to wishing for clear roads in a city known for bad traffic: one good day may happen, but the larger negative energy of the system remains. Her advice is not to waste precious manifestation power trying to reform society unless that is truly one’s purpose. Instead, she says people should control what they can from their own side. Easy Does It and Divine Timing After the break, Sugandhii draws an oracle card reading, “Easy does it.” The message says there is no need to hurry or force things to happen because everything is occurring in perfect timing. Sugandhii connects this card to her broader philosophy of good fortune: people do not have to scramble, force, or start a revolution over everything. Instead, they can relax, align with what they want, trust divine timing, and allow the law of attraction, God, the universe, and spiritual forces to handle what is beyond them. The Cruise Suite as “Ask and It Is Given” Sugandhii shares a major manifestation story from her recent cruise. She says she normally books a regular cabin because she likes spending time outside the room, but before this trip she had looked at the suites and wondered whether she should book one. She ultimately booked a normal room, but when she arrived, she and her family were upgraded to the very type of suite she had been considering, complete with a balcony, ocean view, VIP treatment, and extra perks. For Sugandhii , this is a clear example of desire flowing to the universe and being answered without physical communication. Easy Energy Creates More Easy Energy Sugandhii emphasizes that the cruise experience began easily because they were already in the right city and could go from home directly to the dock without flying, taking a train, or staying overnight elsewhere. Because the trip began in ease, she says the easy energy continued and expanded into the suite upgrade, special treatment, and other good experiences. She repeats that when something begins easily, it can keep becoming easier, and that good fortune often builds momentum when one is aligned with ease rather than struggle. Quality, Career, and the Importance of What We Present Later in the episode, Sugandhii connects beauty and self-worth to career, performance, and public presentation. She says quality matters, whether a person is a daughter-in-law, wife, friend, performer, artist, or professional. Using the metaphor of a restaurant that lowers its food quality, she warns that good energy from the past can only carry someone for a while if the quality of what they offer declines. For her, good fortune includes maintaining the original quality one was born with and presenting something worthy to the world. Appreciation as the Foundation of Good Fortune The episode closes by returning to appreciation. Sugandhii says The Good Fortune Show is about recognizing how fortunate people already are and walking the path of appreciation. Instead of collecting symbols of lack or obsessing over what is wrong, she encourages listeners to notice the miracles already happening, whether that means a peacock outside the window, a cruise upgrade, desired food appearing, or a situation becoming easier than expected. She closes by inviting listeners to enter joyful manifestation energy and good fortune energy before the next episode of The Joyful Manifestation Show.

20. juni 202654 min
episode The Good Fortune Show, June 5, 2026 artwork

The Good Fortune Show, June 5, 2026

The Good Fortune Show with Iyer Protecting Your Good Fortune: Sugandhi Iyer on Attraction, Energy, and Choosing Abundance Sugandhi Iyer Opens The Good Fortune Show In this episode of The Good Fortune Show, host Sugandhi Iyer explores how pieces of a person’s reality can be reflected back almost immediately through signs, coincidences, names, images, people, and repeated themes. She frames these reflections as evidence that people live in an attraction-based world, where what they observe, think about, and energetically hold can quickly appear again in symbolic or literal form. Reflections Through Everyday Signs Sugandhi gives several examples of reality mirroring itself back to her. After seeing and discussing a large picture of Jesus Christ at an herbal massage center, the family’s Uber driver arrived with the name Chris, which she connects to “Christ.” She also describes watching Trolls, focusing on the character Poppy with pink hair, and then soon afterward getting into an Uber whose dashboard was covered in pink fur. For Sugandhi, these are not random accidents, but small signs that the law of attraction is constantly reflecting pieces of one’s focus back into experience. The Friend Who Spoke Negatively About Countries A major portion of the episode centers on a conversation Sugandhi had with an old school and college friend. The friend described Americans as cold and Australians as even colder, claiming that Australians lacked warmth. Sugandhi explains that this struck her as significant because she and her family had been considering travel to Australia and a return to the United States. She interprets the friend’s comments as an energetic attempt, whether conscious or not, to dampen her enthusiasm and interfere with her good fortune connected to those places. Redefining Warmth, Love, and Empathy Sugandhi challenges her friend’s definition of warmth. She argues that warmth is not simply listening to people’s sad stories, allowing them to cry on one’s shoulder, or constantly absorbing other people’s burdens. In her view, true warmth is a state of heart, love, and respect. She says a person may love or respect someone without joining them in sadness or taking on their depression. She also warns that simply listening to repeated complaints without helping someone change can reinforce victimhood rather than transformation. Rejecting Negative Influence and Protecting Desire Sugandhi says she refused to accept her friend’s negative view of the United States and Australia. Instead, she told the friend that she seemed depressed and had taken on too many other people’s burdens. By rejecting that negative interpretation, Sugandhi says she preserved the purity of her own interest in Australia and love for the United States. Soon afterward, the owner of the apartment the family was renting invited them to travel to Australia in September, which Sugandhi reads as confirmation that her positive energy and intention remained intact. Law of Attraction and the Essence of Focus During the second half of the show, Sugandhi draws from a law-of-attraction card deck. One card defines the law of attraction as the idea that “the essence of that which is like unto itself is drawn.” Sugandhi applies this to her own situation, saying that because she held onto the essence of her positive feelings about travel, the United States, and Australia, she attracted more opportunities aligned with those desires. She contrasts this with her friend, who she says may attract colder experiences if she continues carrying negative assumptions about those countries. Choosing Abundance Instead of Lack Sugandhi also pulls a card about the law of attraction bringing whatever abundance one chooses. Although the card refers partly to financial prosperity, Sugandhi expands the idea beyond money. She says abundance includes experiences, travel, people, places, opportunities, and the ability to remain open to beauty rather than shutting down possibilities because of someone else’s negative belief system. In her view, judging an entire country or culture as cold is a choice of lack, while remaining open to positive experience is a choice of abundance. Deflecting Sabotage and Retaining Good Fortune The episode closes with Sugandhi urging listeners to notice when other people are projecting negative beliefs, fear, discouragement, or limiting assumptions into their energy field. She says people must decide what they allow into their aura and what they deflect. Her final message is that good fortune can be protected by holding onto the pure essence of what one loves, wants, and chooses, rather than letting others redefine reality through negativity. She ends by encouraging listeners to retain their good fortune and not let anyone else take it away.

6. juni 202659 min
episode The Good Fortune Show, May 22, 2026 artwork

The Good Fortune Show, May 22, 2026

The Good Fortune Show with Iyer Vibrational Memory, Manifestation, and Recognizing the Energy of Good Fortune Returning Home to Stored Memories and Familiar Energy In this episode of The Good Fortune Show, host Sugandhi Iyer reflects on staying in an apartment overlooking a golf course, landscaped hills, swimming pools, and scenic greenery. She describes the setting as beautiful and carefully designed, but her central observation is spiritual: she believes places retain energetic records of the experiences people have had there. After returning to a city associated with her earlier life, she begins noticing unexpected reminders of the past, especially through music playing on the apartment television. Music Channels and a “Blast from the Past” Sugandhi explains that the furnished apartment came with a television and preset music channels, several of which begin playing English-language songs she listened to while growing up in that city. She remembers learning classical music and dance as part of her upbringing, while independently enjoying English popular songs and imitating the vocal styles of singers she heard. The familiar songs bring back memories of family, neighbors, powerful sound systems, music shared between apartments, terrace parties, and a time when people seemed more tolerant of one another’s enjoyment. She describes the experience as a “blast from the past” and wonders whether the universe is recreating memories held in her energy field. The Law of Attraction as a Manager of Expansion The program then turns to cards from Getting into the Vortex, which Sugandhi uses to explore the law of attraction. One card states that the universal law of attraction is managing expansion, while another describes people as vibrational beings continually emanating desires. Sugandhi interprets these ideas through the music appearing in her current environment, suggesting that the universe may be responding not only to conscious thoughts but also to stored inner energy, past experience, and emotional vibration. She distinguishes this inner energy from the soul itself, saying she views the soul as divine while emotional or subconscious material may influence manifested experience. Las Vegas, Fun, and the Energy of Desired Experience Sugandhi connects the recurring music to another important part of her life: Las Vegas and her personal association with the song “Girls Just Want to Have Fun.” She explains that she attended Cyndi Lauper’s concert and regards the song as expressing a guiding attitude of wanting enjoyment, happiness, and a lively experience of life. She clarifies that this does not mean women cannot be responsible in marriage, family, or other commitments; rather, she sees the desire for fun as an authentic energetic preference. Because the song begins appearing repeatedly in her current setting, she interprets it as another example of past energy, memory, and desire resurfacing in present experience. Choosing Lunch with Jay-Z Over $500,000 A major portion of the episode considers the popular question: would a person rather receive $500,000 or have lunch with Jay-Z? Sugandhi says that despite not being a fan of his music, appearance, or personal choices, her immediate response was that she would choose the lunch. She reflects on why her mind assigned more value to the experience of meeting a highly successful person than to the money itself. Using another card about desire and alignment, she suggests that the choice may reveal an absence of perceived financial shortage in her energy field: her mind did not urgently grasp for the money because it did not automatically operate from a feeling of lack. Attention, Shortage, and Creating One’s Reality Toward the end, Sugandhi expands the discussion into a broader teaching about attention and manifestation. She argues that people’s automatic thoughts reveal whether they are operating from abundance, desire, enjoyment, competition, or perceived shortage. She also connects this principle to her recent focus on laborers and service workers, observing that a delivery person rang the doorbell during the broadcast after she had spent considerable energy thinking and talking about that subject. For Sugandhi, this becomes an example of how concentrated attention may draw corresponding experiences into one’s reality. She closes by encouraging listeners to observe what they are focusing on, notice whether their energy reflects good fortune or lack, and move intentionally toward the experiences they truly want.

23. maj 202659 min