@ThrobbingHood long story short. I see people have close knit connections with friends or family.
My family is kinda estranged and my friends tend to be Fairweather
Even the most confident of men have a support system
Yeah, I feel you on that. I lost a lot of “friends” during my broke/grinding period. And those same friends suddenly came out of the woodwork when they saw I was making paper.
I’d be lying if it said it didn’t make me resentful and misanthropic. Those same nikkas saw me struggling and didn’t say or do shyt. Not that I would ask or accept help because I’m too prideful for that, but even just knowing they had my back would’ve meant something.
Im definitely lucky I’ve always had great parents. We’ve had our ups and downs because most of us are knuckle heads when we’re younger, thinking we know better. But now that I’m older, I can’t believe how much I took their support for granted.
That’s why I spoil them when I can because the way they sacrificed for me to do well in life is priceless.
So yes, you’re right, a support system is vital. You can’t do it all on your own. No one is superhuman. That being said, being envious will not help you. It’s too easy to look at other people and think “why do they have it easier than me?”
Trust me, I thought that alot going to college and seeing those trust fund kids who NEVER had to struggle one day in their lives. Having everything handed to them.
I feel shytty now that I even had these thoughts, but I resented my parents at one point for not being rich/well off when they had me. I used to selfishly think “why have me when you’re just about getting by? You brought me into a world of struggle when others don’t have to?”
I cringe now that I even think that because my parents gave me things that are invaluable: love, protection, principles, integrity and a hard work ethic. They did jobs they didn’t have to do to Keep a roof over my head and food on the table.
Most of those same rich kids I went to college with now have drug, alcohol problems because they’ve never had to struggle and have this self-loathing feeling of “I didn’t earn it.” Neglect from their rich parents who sent them to boarding school has term them into sociopaths.
Those struggles kept me grounded and built my character. If I was born with a silver spoon in my mouth, I wouldn’t be the person I am today who’s grateful for everything and appreciates the value of every dollar I make.
So don’t be envious of other people because your journey is unique to your own. Hopefully, you’ll build a strong support system in the future and maybe even reconcile with your parents. But you have to work on yourself first and the rest will come organically.
I know this is an unpopular thing to say on the coli, but most people don't have to work hard or do anything hard at life
Kinda goes back to my first post. You have to learn to view the world as “neutral” and understand that the concept of “fairness” is a fallacy. We are all on our own journey.
The person who seems to have it easy may be going through “imposter syndrome”. That person who has everything handed to them may not feel they earned it and drinks themselves to sleep every night. You don’t know, so being envious is pointless.