Despite the odds, you can never win if you do not have a ticket.
Some one or two or more in the 175,000,000 ticket buyers [said
tongue-in-cheek] will eventually win.
Don't go crazy and spend big bucks on buying tickets. Be reasonable in
doing so. All you need is one.
Take Forrest747's advice from his first paragraph - don't tell anyone at all
if you are fortunate/lucky enough to win! Lotto money envy weirds most
people out - why ask for all the major grief it'd cause you if you advertise
your win? You aren't that foolishly needy enough for attention are you?
Take a reasonable set amount out to satisfy any conspicuous consumption
cravings the win would set off, and don't go too crazy doing so. Get the
necessary advice to park the vast majority of the rest of the winnings
somewhere safe so you can spend the rest of the year educating yourself
on how to handle big sums of $ for yourself. That now is your new full-time
job - if you are smart enough to realize it. And while you're at it, fine-tune
your bullsheist filter, that'll be even more important everafter.
Don't buy into any guilt-trips, self-imposed or otherwise. Money won't buy
you happiness, but it can make misery a helluva lot easier to take. And
it can facilitate your achieving happiness.
That old saying; "Money is the root of all evil" is incorrect. The old saying
is actually: The LOVE of money is the root of all evil. [So much for the
veracity of translations.] Money is just a tool or facilitator. [Yeh, I know ,"just".]
Like all tools, you need to learn how to use it effectively. It can help you
achieve great benefits for yourself and many others.
Use your good fortune for doing good, you now have great financial ability
to do so. Use it wisely. It can multiply kindness exponentially. That's the
only way to make it really matter. Squandering it on vices just proves you
are a fool.
Cheers,
Norm/mezmo