- Joined
- Mar 7, 2026
- Posts
- 1,267
- Reputation
- 3,208
Man has always been judged by his value. The problem is that much of this value is assigned at birth. Some people are born with advantages beauty, intelligence, status, genetics, charisma while others must fight for every ounce of recognition they receive.
When you become aware of your own base value and constantly see others doing better than you, it affects the mind deeply. The human brain naturally focuses more on negative experiences because, from an evolutionary standpoint, survival depended on identifying threats and shortcomings. Because of this, having an ego becomes almost necessary to thrive.
A man cannot carry the weight of life without some kind of fire inside him a second self, an idealized version of himself, something greater than what he currently is. Whether someone is at the top or the bottom, a certain level of narcissism is necessary to keep moving forward.
That mentality creates the “whatever it takes” mindset: the refusal to remain weak, invisible, or forgettable. The willingness to endure obsession, sacrifice, humiliation, and failure in pursuit of becoming more. Without ego, most men would simply accept their condition and stop striving entirely.
Ego is also what transforms defeat into fuel. Instead of seeing loss as something that should break you emotionally, it becomes something that awakens envy, anger, and intensity. Not necessarily blind hatred toward others, but hatred toward stagnation, weakness, and your current limitations. That emotional fire pushes a person beyond what they originally thought they were capable of accomplishing.
Many great achievements are born from wounded pride. A man with no ego often becomes passive, but a man with controlled arrogance constantly feels the need to rise higher, prove himself, and surpass both others and his former self.
People often say, “You’re just insecure,” whenever someone displays pride, ambition, or arrogance. But that is not always true. Many times, it is simply a way for others to suppress confidence and keep people within acceptable limits.
A large ego can come from two places: genuine self-confidence or foolish delusion. But excessive humility is not automatically wisdom either. In many cases, the people who constantly hide behind humility are insecure themselves, afraid they cannot live up to bold claims or defend their own worth.
In my opinion, it is better to be defeated while striving for greatness than to live in quiet submission disguised as humility.
Random thought i had let me know your opinion
When you become aware of your own base value and constantly see others doing better than you, it affects the mind deeply. The human brain naturally focuses more on negative experiences because, from an evolutionary standpoint, survival depended on identifying threats and shortcomings. Because of this, having an ego becomes almost necessary to thrive.
A man cannot carry the weight of life without some kind of fire inside him a second self, an idealized version of himself, something greater than what he currently is. Whether someone is at the top or the bottom, a certain level of narcissism is necessary to keep moving forward.
That mentality creates the “whatever it takes” mindset: the refusal to remain weak, invisible, or forgettable. The willingness to endure obsession, sacrifice, humiliation, and failure in pursuit of becoming more. Without ego, most men would simply accept their condition and stop striving entirely.
Ego is also what transforms defeat into fuel. Instead of seeing loss as something that should break you emotionally, it becomes something that awakens envy, anger, and intensity. Not necessarily blind hatred toward others, but hatred toward stagnation, weakness, and your current limitations. That emotional fire pushes a person beyond what they originally thought they were capable of accomplishing.
Many great achievements are born from wounded pride. A man with no ego often becomes passive, but a man with controlled arrogance constantly feels the need to rise higher, prove himself, and surpass both others and his former self.
People often say, “You’re just insecure,” whenever someone displays pride, ambition, or arrogance. But that is not always true. Many times, it is simply a way for others to suppress confidence and keep people within acceptable limits.
A large ego can come from two places: genuine self-confidence or foolish delusion. But excessive humility is not automatically wisdom either. In many cases, the people who constantly hide behind humility are insecure themselves, afraid they cannot live up to bold claims or defend their own worth.
In my opinion, it is better to be defeated while striving for greatness than to live in quiet submission disguised as humility.
Random thought i had let me know your opinion







nah but genuinely, why does he do that he even made his name nineteen before and i was confused
