Success
By: Victor • Essay • 549 Words • May 3, 2010 • 1,040 Views
Success
Success
Everyone’s vision of success differs. Wealth, happiness, and fame are all the stereotypical aspirations of the common person’s so-called “American Dream.” My American dream encompasses more of the first two aspects than anything else. Happiness is the most important; without happiness, wealth and fame are useless. Without happiness, success cannot exist; it is your own personal gauge of accomplishment. If you cannot look at yourself in the mirror and evaluate your own life a success, then why should anyone else consider you successful? Wealth can attribute to happiness. No matter what anyone says, having more material goods makes your standard of living better, which normally is a direct correlate of happiness. It helps you experience the luxurious joys in life that, otherwise, you couldn’t carry out. Fame, to me, isn’t needed but rather acquired through the life of the successful person. A legacy is more honorable than a national fame, because after death fame is a more humble characteristic. Changing others lives, after they examined your life in retrospect, makes fame an irreplaceable cog in the machine of success.
Admirations and aspirations of a person can help determine how successful they will be. Role models help blaze a path of success in the minds of their protйgй. If someone looks up to a person who themselves are successful, they have better odds of being successful themselves. On the other hand, looking up to a failure of a human being, thus in turn, creates the image in failure in the mind. I, myself, look up to the clichй models of the father, school teacher, and famous athletes. Anybody who has been able to impact my life for the better is considered a role model, because if you take time to make someone’s life better, especially in sacrifice of your own well-being,