Luck didn't get me into College. Luck didn't take the LSAT for me. Luck didn't get me into Law School. Luck didn't pass the bar for me.
But did it play any sort of a role in your finding your lawyer job and then not getting laid off when you were a lowly associate? You do realize that the vast majority of JD graduates today are unable to find work in the legal profession?
According to one study, only about 54% of all lawyers produced from 1969 on work in the legal profession (and the rate for graduates of the past two decades is probably significantly lower than that since the legal job market was presumably better in the '70's and '80's) and the law schools have been overproducing lawyers to support having one lawyer for every 172 people since the 1970s.
My point is that investing 7 years in college education and working hard to graduate from law school and pass the Bar Exam is no longer sufficient to attain career success or to even have the opportunity to learn how to be a lawyer (which requires working as an associate apprentice under other lawyers for a couple years after law school, which means finding a legal job after law school).
How many "informational interviews" and networking attempts do you receive each week? How many unsolicited resumes do you get? Are you under the impression that all of those hard-working job seekers who didn't want to rely on luck are finding career-building positions in the legal profession?
Hard-work and personal responsibility is no longer sufficient in today's society and hasn't been sufficient for a decade or two. Luck and the avoidance of back luck also play a large role even though we might not like that fact.
For another view of the legal profession that you may have missed and/or for entertainment purposes, come visit the law school scambusting blogs. A group of malevolent lawyers want to close 80% of the law schools. This blog is a good place to start:
http://lawschoolscam.blogspot.com
Here's a fun discussion forum:
http://www.JDUnderground.com
Here's an interesting blog entry that might shed some light on the relationship between hard work, luck, the avoidance of bad luck, job/career security, and economic success:
Laid Off Lawyer Applies to 1000 Jobs and Gets Zero Interviews