As of today June 1, 2012 Friday the Jackpot prize of 6/45 is estimated to reach P33 million and the draw is today.
The lotto jackpot prize of 6/55 is estimated to reach P55 million tomorrow.
The lotto jackpot prize of 6/49 is estimated to reach P 75 million by Sunday's draw.
This will take a time again to have 3 straight big draws.
As of Yesterday the 6/42 draw with a jackpot prize of P12 million has been won already and this is going to be a winners week for 2 to 3 jackpot draws.
Now my advice to all is, bet all this draws with 2 bets each with 1 chosen number combinations and add 1 lucky pick bet.
I hope this time my fellow lotto bettors this is it for you and you better believe it this time.
While searching for some lotto news I found a story that being a lotto winner sometimes comes with a burden.
Sarah Myers is alone.
She lost most of her friends and family. Her ability to trust.
All because of one ticket. One $23 million ( 966 million pesos) Powerball ticket.
“I’m never treated like a person any more. I hate that,” Myers said, her voice cracking. “To most people, I’m a bank.”
Winning
the lotto, many players believe, would be the best thing to ever happen
to them. To suddenly find yourself living a life of luxury, with no
more worries about bills. New cars, new houses, trips, leisure.
But
as those little white lotto balls pop from the tumbler, most players
aren’t thinking about the warnings.
People will call looking for
money. Your friends and family, attorneys, charity groups, financial
planners, lawyers. Relatives you never even knew you had will come
forward.
Your mail box
will fill with requests from strangers — some with sick family members,
others just plain desperate or greedy — all wanting a piece of your
winnings.
The truth is, very few lotto players think they will
actually win the jackpot. so finding yourself suddenly rich
is always shocking to some degree.
“The reason it’s popular and
fun because it allows people to dream about what that will be like, “That’s what the buck or two is buying you — that great feeling,
and the chance to win money.”
It was a “miracle” when Sarah Myers won.
Once
a factory worker living paycheck to paycheck, Myers and her husband
were instant millionaires.
They built a dream home from them and their
three children. Myers and her husband each got a new Dodge.
And
they gave a lot of the money away. Some went to the Salvation Army. Some
went to Amish neighbors. Some went to the eight children she sponsors
overseas.
But the more money Myers gave away, the more friends and
family she seemed to lose. Extended family members kept asking for
money. She helped many: Myers bought about 20 cars and handed out more
money over the years.
But if she questioned
someone’s need or said no, she often lost that person from her life.
People
around the winners change, . “People are in awe of winning that kind of
money,.
Despite winning the lotto, Myers kept her job at
the factory to stay grounded. But her co-workers told her she was
stealing a job from someone else who needed it.
“Sometimes
you feel like you’re all alone. It’s sad, “Family is the
worst because they know how to get you. ... They see I feel alone, and
they take advantage of that.”
She eventually quit the factory and stayed on part-time at a gas station.
The
money came in especially handy the next year when she was diagnosed
with cervical cancer and given a grim prognosis. She’s been in remission
but quit working.
Then her husband was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.
When families get sick, neighbors reach out to help. But with Myers, many expected payment for their good deeds.
Still, after all the lost friends and family, she’s glad she had the winning ticket.
“It’s
almost like everyone around you is taking a truth pill, “You
find out who is really a friend and who is a family. You find out who
looks at you like a person and not a bank. It’s nice to know, but it’s
hurtful.”
Source: Jessica Larsen
LacrosseTribune