• partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Its not wrong, but its not only a rich people thing.

    • Spending time getting education, whether college or trade school, is a gamble. You’re putting precious time and money into a body of knowledge/skill that you’re betting will not only break even, but profit.
    • Specializing in THING X vs. THING Y is a gamble. You may have chose the new hotness skill and be very much in demand, or you may have chosen the dead end skill or a skill that there is a glut in the number of people that can do it meaning low demand for you.
    • Taking on a difficult job or employer, but getting to work on things that improve you with your skill is a gamble. The boss could suck enough that even though the possible outcome is great, the boss sabotages it.
    • Choosing to pivot once you have one set of skills to gain an additional set is a gamble. You may have been better off staying on one course and keep progressing higher vs becoming someone with multiple sets of intersecting skills.
    • Lemmygizer@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      The analogy I always liked was:

      Success is like a carnival dart game.

      If you’re poor you probably don’t even get a chance to play. Maybe once with some help from friends and family. But even then, the odds are still not good.

      If you’re middle class you can afford a throw or two, significantly increasing the odds of success.

      If you’re rich you can afford to throw as many darts as you want until you succeed.