
People love to talk about humility.
But most of them don’t even know what it means.
They think humility is pretending to be less than you are.
They think it’s playing small.
They think it’s never showing pride in what you’ve earned.
When they see someone successful…
Someone confident…
Someone who’s built something undeniable…
…they scream “not humble.”
What they fail to realize is to even get to that level, you had tobe humble first.
You had to admit what you didn’t know.
You had to face your weaknesses.
You had to learn.
You had to fail and stay a student long enough to grow.
You had to do whatever it took.
That’s humility.
Real humility isn’t denying what you’ve built.
It’s knowing you built it because of the actions you took.
Not because you were chosen…
Not because you had a superpower…
Not because you were “different” in some magical way…
It’s understanding that if you could do it…
…someone else could too.
IF they chose to hold the line and pay the same price.
Humility also has nothing to do with the car you drive, the clothes you wear, or whether you like nice shit.
Some people just like nice shit.
Some people like to enjoy the fruits of their labor.
That doesn’t make them arrogant.
That doesn’t cancel out humility.
Because humility isn’t about the surface.
It’s not about the material things.
It’s about the perspective you carry.
Arrogance says: “I’m better than everyone else.”
Humility says: “I worked for this,
and I know anyone else could too
if they made the same decisions.”
So don’t confuse confidence with arrogance.
Don’t confuse success with over-inflated ego.
Don’t confuse someone living big with someone who forgot where they came from.
Real humility isn’t thinking less of yourself.
It’s thinking more of the people around you.
It’s respecting the truth that what you’ve built was earned through action and knowing the people around you have the same potential inside them…
…because they do.
#100to0