This topic have always been the core subject for many gatherings of any sort right next to love. I didn't really care too much about this topic until I had a debate with another Khmer person. It seems many Khmer Americans don't value education very much here and usually end up in dead end jobs. But the debate started when he think success is being a white collar worker and being a blue collar worker is not. He believe unless you're making at least $50,000 a year salary then you're not successful and that the only way to achieve it is being a white collar worker. Being a blue collar worker myself I disagreed. The very definition of success itself is
the accomplishment of one's goals but it seems some people have a skewered sense of what it is and many start to believe that it equates to the financial status of a person. I believe every person have their own goal in life and achieving that goal is what I think is success.
My question for this forum is what is success to you?
A great man named Peter La Fleur from the movie Dodgeball said, "I found that if you have a goal, that you might not reach it. But if you don't have one, then you are never disappointed. And I got to tell you, it feels phenomenal." haha
Peter's quote is literally true but also depressing. haha
Seriously, I'm going to piggyback on what everyone's common denominator about success - it's subjective. Because of this, there will be differences, and when people are in opposite sides in thinking, there's probably gonna be a debate and/or argument. Then, there's gonna be people who hate because of ignorance. Ignorance can lead to violence. Violence can lead to problems like in the Ferguson case. Something like the Ferguson case can lead to mass disruptions in our society.
I may have sounded like the DirecTV commercial, where guy who ended up in a roadside ditch after going through sequences of bad things happening to him.
Before anyone, including me, jumps into conclusions, we have to take a step backwards and define what success means to them. One of my close friends seem like he's got everything made. He is well over your friend's $50k+ per year salary requirement, plus owns a percentage of stocks (that hasn't gone IPO yet btw) in his company. His wife, who so happens to be a teacher, has a salary around the ballpark of $50k per year. They're both college grads, even the wife has a master's degree. They own a 10-year-old two-story house in a decent area. They have nice rides. Hell, they even buy Blu-ray movies while most frugal people like me just downloads them haha.
Most people would consider this couple success people. Now, since I know them extremely well and we've had our conversations about our goals in life and how achievements would translate to success, I know they do not feel like they are successful people. What? Why? How come? What's missing in their lives? They don't have children! I'd like to think they're responsible individuals because ever since they met in college, they knew they're gonna be together for the long haul, finished schools, get married, get careers, buy a house, and all that shit. Unfortunately, according to them, having no children after trying for the last 3 years means they are not successful.
Okay, I think I'm spending too much time on this post, even though I got a couple of more examples to give. Basically, I'm saying the same like everyone else said. Success needs to be clearly defined by the person and not you.