I'm pretty sure if everyone will be honest, most of us have the same feeling from time to time.
Sometimes it drives us, gives us energy to work. But sometimes it has the opposite effect.
Any thoughts about this?
I recognize it is irrational and sad behavior, but it’s too hard for me to accept people close to me who come into success purely based on luck (strong talent is barely table stake and not a predictor of outsized success).
I have ex-friends who joined startups and roles which were no different than the ones I joined, and they made $20M+ while I didn’t have nearly the same outcome. Similar with ex-friends who made bank in crypto. The worst is when they are also not intellectually honest and try to school you on some bs life lessons on how their success was very much planned despite the fact that you took the same exact risks, with the same exact expected rewards, as them.
"“There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility is being superior to your former self.” ― Ernest Hemingway"
You will always feel shitty if you compare yourself with others. Question is: are you better off personally/professionally compared to yourself from last year/5/10 years ago ? If that answer is Yes, you are good. If not, then yea act on it.
There is ALWAYS someone richer/smarter/successful/accomplished than you. Just the way life is. Imagine if someone worth $50 Million looks at Bill gates and goes, man I wish I could afford what he does. THere is never a limit.
So, start comparing your past to your present/future and make sure you are incrementally creating a better life for yourself and family.
I don't think that I could "succeed" any more than I have.
You don't need billions, just your health, some intellect and knowledge, and a basic enough lifestyle.
If there were to be some version of me out there with 10x the money - I mean they'd have a bigger house and fun toys, that's it.
If you don't have the minimum and you're a slave that's different. Then you're less envious of others, and more unhappy with your own position.
I'm either happy with my situation or I'm not. If I'm not, I work to improve it. But how happy (or not) someone else is isn't relevant to my own situation.
I know this isn't really helpful, and I know that I'm not "normal" on this.
I'm being snarky and dark to make a point that life is more important than work. Ambition is great and can motivate at times but persistence and discipline of getting work done even when you aren't feeling like it is the definition of being a professional.
There are always going to be smarter, wealthier people out there with nicer toys.
Most of my good friends are working-class to lower-middle-class, and it's generally the case that the people who make just a bit more than needed (i.e., not impoverished, but steadily employed and just not earning much above minimum wage, but has stable shelter, food, occasional vacations, etc.) that are the happiest. They end up being the ones who chase their dreams and hobbies instead of a soul-crushing, burnout-inducing techbro career, who befriend and partner with well-balanced, interesting people with diverse hobbies, who love their pets and families and children and neighbors and communities... all the OTHER things outside of work that make life worth living.
Sure, a satisfying work life is important, but that can come in so many forms and not just compensation (i.e., being able to work on interesting problems, or having a great team/coworkers, good work-life balance)... as long as you get paid ENOUGH, amounts beyond that don't really add to happiness.
By contrast, as a rule, all the most miserable people I know (outside of severe addicts) are, well, rich. In a way, they are addicts too -- of capitalism. They get completely blinded by their pursuit of material wealth, big empty mansions, luxury cars with no coziness, manicured landscapes with no life. It's like they spent all that time (and more importantly, emotional energy) earning money that they don't really know what's worthwhile to spend it on, how to use it to actually pay for experiences of happiness (it's not automatic), or contribute to local communities. They just sit isolated in their designer castles, wondering why they have everything and nothing at the same time. It's lonely at the top...
IMO I don't think your lack of overwhelming material wealth is necessarily a problem. It's our toxic definition of "success" -- equating greed with happiness, when they are totally different -- that makes people feel "less than" when in reality they have so much and could have so much more. Don't chase the dollars that add up to nothing in the end, chase the moments and memories you'll remember well into your 90s. Just my 2 cents.