- Joined
- Jun 11, 2019
I've been mulling this over in the back of my head for a few weeks now, and I think that although I was thinking about this in monetary terms it applies to almost all forms of success. Basically, it seems like if you discount people who got their wealth through luck (inheritance, lottery, etc.) rich people tend to look at opportunity differently from poor people. Of the people I personally know, often the wealthy or in some other sense successful people tend to look at the future in terms of opportunities to be found and find work engaging and almost game-like. Conversely, many of the people I know who live paycheck to paycheck seem to look at the future like some inexorable wall they must somehow force themselves to climb, and tend to complain about problems more than they look for solutions. I know that many people are in terrible situations that are nearly impossible to lift themselves out of, but lots of other people almost seem to enjoy wallowing in mediocrity and failure. Basically, I'm wondering what frame of mind separates those who accomplish their goals from those who don't.