In the end
It’s not about who are born to be
But about who endured
the cost of becoming
On What Is Given, and What Must Be Endured
Some people are born into wealth. Some are just born pretty, and some are born with unusual talents like intelligence or artistic gifts. The world is not fair, and it offers no guarantee that its asymmetries will favor you. Acknowledging this is the first act of clarity. It does not have to represent cynicism, but it rather carries a powerful, almost primitive pull. Before anything else, we must confront what we are given.
But inheritance alone does not decide a life. What we are given shapes our starting point, not the direction we move in. At some point, a question emerges: Do we accept what we lack as fate, and retreat from what we imagine we were never meant to become?
No, we choose to explore the world and build ourselves as who we aspire to be. Sometimes we long for what we never had. Sometimes we want to get more of what we already have. We make choices for ourselves.
Choice is never neutral. To choose is to incur cost. Every direction taken excludes another, and every commitment demands payment. Not everyone chooses the same costs. Now, second, we need to find what tradeoff we’re willing to take and pay the price.
This is where paradox enters.
Much as we cannot truly understand what we never experienced, those who are born into abundance often never encounter deprivation. Those who are born admired rarely experience invisibility, and those who rely entirely on their gifts may never learn to tolerate sustained difficulty.
What is given can become a limit. What appears as advantage can quietly erode endurance. Hence, to depend on what is inherited is to risk never discovering what must be grown, to risk never learning how to pay for the things you want.
Only a few continue to choose, even when the initial advantage fades. Even fewer endure uncertainty, the patience required to remain in the dark. In the end, the distinction is not who was born speical, but who continued to choose, and endured the cost of becoming.