Twitter lit up a couple of days ago regarding Forbes declaring Kylie Jenner the youngest self-made billionaire, reaching that level at the age of 21.
I'll confess. My gut reaction was the same as what a lot of other peoples' reaction was. She started as a millionaire with every possible advantage available to her. How "self-made" can we possibly call her? In thinking through the logic of this assertion, I hit on what I believe are a few uncomfortable truths that a lot of people don't like to think about when comparing themselves to others.
Truth #1 - No one is self-made
While it is true that there is a sliding scale to how self-made a person is, the reality is no one is truly self-made, and I doubt many are even in the general neighborhood. If you're even mildly successful in some area of life I can guarantee that many of the factors in that are gifts that were beyond your control. I considered typing examples of this, but it's so specific to the person and the examples are usually embarrassingly obvious.
The response that most people would give to this is that, sure, I have some advantages in life, but not anywhere near the advantages Ms. Jenner has been given. Perhaps this is true, but there are billions of people who don't have the advantages that I've been given in life. In my moment of taking credit away from her I'm also thinking in the back of my mind that I've worked for and earned what I have.
Truth #2 - I am responsible for the opportunities I pass up
The reality is that I wouldn't have become a billionaire if I were Ms. Jenner. I like to think that I would have made something of the opportunities would have had in her shoes. I'm deluding myself to think that my grit and smarts would have outperformed hers. Yes, she had every opportunity, but she also clearly used it.
I have to acknowledge that my life, like everyone else's, is marked by a series of choices I have made to do or not do certain things. There are times when I have chosen a path that led to growth, and there are times when I have not. There are times when I made actively destructive decisions.
Whether I have the maturity to make a wise choice is always on me.
Truth #3 - We value people too much for their wealth
While accruing a billion dollars in wealth is significant and noteworthy, this doesn't say anything about Ms. Jenner as a person. The size of her bank account or assets alone doesn't validate or invalidate her as a person.
None of this is shocking, new, or particularly insightful. However, I find that I constantly want to go back to the same broken patterns I see others stuck in. So much of life is spent building a career with the intent to generate an income that it's easy for that to be my identity. It's then easy to compare the life that my resources allow me to have to the lives others have, then to let that determine my value.
So, when someone is shown to have accrued wealth it is easy to think of that wealth as a gauge of their worth, and whatever I have accrued as a gauge of my worth. I know it's wrong. Most people factually understand this. I also know I'm not the only person who naturally falls into this mindset, and has to combat it.
So, Ms. Jenner does deserve some congratulations on this milestone. It's significant! But, it doesn't make her a more or less significant person. If she loses her wealth and everything else tomorrow she's no more or less valuable of a person than today as a billionaire. That's a truth I find both the easiest and the hardest to believe.
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