Not everyone is born with a silver spoon. Not everyone has a "luck of an Irish" (pardon the term). But a lot of us have been put down, spat on, humiliated, and missed a lot of golden opportunities. A lot of us fought the good fight, but just didn't make the grade.
Success, sadly, is made both with hardship and a lot of times, fabricated opportunities.
Fabricated in the sense, that some may lie their way to the top (or lay depending on your situation), push off competition (with extreme prejudice, sorry for the cliché), or simply make their way at that right moment, be it by luck, or by deceit.
What does irk me most times, is when these individuals (or groups of people) reach the apex, achieve what few people could, they begin to look down on the others that didn't.
We, the bottom feeders, the needy, the failures in life are either seen as leeches, dregs of society.
Some of us, if not most, have experienced adversities, and unfortunately had a hard time from climbing back up to the challenges in life. But that doesn't mean we are wallowing in our disgrace. That doesn't mean we are forever in this state.
But to label us as failures shows how much these "upper crusts" have been blinded by their "sparkly" higher status in society. The best description would be how a winner in a race would gloat at the last placer, or a person who used to live in a backwater country, now enjoying the fruits of his/her labor in a first-rate society.
Somehow, those who made the grade have forgotten life is a wheel, and it cycles from one point to another. And the higher you are in your mountain, the harder it is when you fall from your own fragile pedestal. Somehow, in their arrogance and self-righteous perception, they have failed to see the what ifs and if they were in the other person's figurative shoes.
Perhaps, their success is cast in stone, but at what cost, and whose stepping-stone have they used and abused to get all the way up to their successful careers/businesses?
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