upbeatbean
New Member
In the past, Did you enter as single or with your spouse? How about when you won?
TIA
TIA
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Entered the previous 6 years for both myself and my husband. Same as the year we were selected.In the past, Did you enter as single or with your spouse? How about when you won?
TIA
congrats on getting selected at last. you must be thrilled. hope it goes well for youEntered the previous 6 years for both myself and my husband. Same as the year we were selected.
We only started applying after we moved to the US. We are here due to my husbands specialty occupation.congrats on getting selected at last. you must be thrilled. hope it goes well for you
I saw the comment about your age in the DV lottery thread
Mind if i ask why you didn't enter in the years prior to 2016?
THANK you for the elaborate reply.We only started applying after we moved to the US. We are here due to my husbands specialty occupation.
Prior to 2016 we were living in many different countries. Personally I couldn’t see myself applying for immigration to a country without having been there and/or had a job secured (but that’s a personal decision based on our life circumstances).
Entered the previous 6 years for both myself and my husband. Same as the year we were selected.
Are you a current winner? Or just considering applying/have applied?THANK you for the elaborate reply.
this actually helped me get an idea myself. keeping my expectations low & sticking with my original plan
even for oceania? i saw people in this forum & even @Britsimon say odds are good for oceaniaThe odds of being selected are something like 1 in every 200 years (I heard that stat on a YT video).
not a current winnerAre you a current winner?
You'd have to ask him directly. I'm not sure if the odds change per region, I just know it really is the luck of the draw.even for oceania? i saw people in this forum & even @Britsimon say odds are good for oceania
not a current winner
That's super interesting. Are you from Fiji? It's very evident in 2024 of the huge increase in those numbers.I think the probability in Oceania is way higher then the others regions. I have 4 close relatives who won. My mums older sister was the first i believe in 2007, 2 of my first cousins won, 1 of of them won it twice although both got rejected, my younger brother won 2012, and now my spouse is won for 2024.
Yes I'm from Fiji. Both cousins had some bad records which was reason for rejection.That's super interesting. Are you from Fiji? It's very evident in 2024 of the huge increase in those numbers.
Do you know the reason why cousins got rejected?
Fingers crossed for your GC to get issued.Yes I'm from Fiji. Both cousins had some bad records which was reason for rejection.
Thank you @megdavidson26. Our number is quite high though. We will have to wait and see how it goes.Fingers crossed for your GC to get issued.
The odds for OC are far higher than other regions - about 1 in 20.even for oceania? i saw people in this forum & even @Britsimon say odds are good for oceania
not a current winner
Caught in the "Gambler's fallacy" there @Britsimon .The odds for OC are far higher than other regions - about 1 in 20.
I'm the person that expresses the odds (for other regions) as 1 in 200 years or similar. I express it that way to make the point it isn't a plan. In OC region the odds are so much better that it almost could be a plan (especially for a couple - each with an entry). If a couple both enter for 3 or 4 years they are pretty likely to get selected.
@Samusoni - you are confidently incorrect. If the odds for a region were 1 in 20, then you are correct that for each individual year a person enters, they would have a 1 in 20 chance. But if a person plans to enter each year for the next 5 years, their likelihood of being selected over the course of five lotteries is greater than 1 in 20 (actually closer to 1 in 5).Caught in the "Gambler's fallacy" there @Britsimon .
Theory states that, if the region's odds are 1 in 20 (as you put it above), then if someone enters for 3 or 4 years, their chances improve to a measly 1 in 20. If they enter for 1000 years (assuming that's possible), their chances improve to, wait for it...., 1 in 20!!!
I am certainly correct. I am glad we agree on the first part; successive entries are statistically independent events, so your chances in one year does not change your chances in another year! That was my whole argument. Now you you added a second twist to the question.@Samusoni - you are confidently incorrect. If the odds for a region were 1 in 20, then you are correct that for each individual year a person enters, they would have a 1 in 20 chance. But if a person plans to enter each year for the next 5 years, their likelihood of being selected over the course of five lotteries is greater than 1 in 20 (actually closer to 1 in 5).
EDIT: Sorry, this forum does not seem to allow me to edit my own post above.@Samusoni - you are confidently incorrect. If the odds for a region were 1 in 20, then you are correct that for each individual year a person enters, they would have a 1 in 20 chance. But if a person plans to enter each year for the next 5 years, their likelihood of being selected over the course of five lotteries is greater than 1 in 20 (actually closer to 1 in 5).
Right, but when you responded to @Britsimon that he was "caught in the Gambler's fallacy", I think you may not have read his statement correctly. He stated the following, "in OC region the odds are so much better that it almost could be a plan (especially for a couple - each with an entry). If a couple both enter for 3 or 4 years they are pretty likely to get selected."EDIT: Sorry, this forum does not seem to allow me to edit my own post above.
I now understand how you came up with a 1 to 5 chance. That does not, however, explain away my original point. If you have been applying for 4 years, and on the 5th year you apply again, you do not have better chances than someone who is applying for the first time, it's still 1 to 20. That's why I cited the gambler's fallacy. I don't understand the practical meaning of the 1 to 5 chances (over 5 years), except to say "if you do not enter, you don't win".
Not at all caught in that fallacy at all, thanks.Caught in the "Gambler's fallacy" there @Britsimon .
Theory states that, if the region's odds are 1 in 20 (as you put it above), then if someone enters for 3 or 4 years, their chances improve to a measly 1 in 20. If they enter for 1000 years (assuming that's possible), their chances improve to, wait for it...., 1 in 20!!!