A sideways
glance, a sigh, no eye contact – yes, I have seen that before. It’s the yuppie
who has just entered the cosmopolitan world of money and power – a world that
is new and enticing, where he thinks he can conquer the world and conquer it
all.
Humility is seen
as a virtue by many peoples and cultures and placed in high regard, especially by
Asian cultures. Recently, I was in a few
situations where I started thinking about humility and how people practice
it. In New York City, where everything
is dense, people, streets, emotions, drama and life, I have found that certain
individuals trade humility for pretentiousness.
In a city where the first questions someone asks are what you do and where
you live, the pressure to conform has taken away the humility from many individuals.
Success in America
is also not always associated with humble people. If you are humble, you may not
be able to toot your own horn. That in turn can result in less interviews for a
job seeker, or less publicity for a new author.
However, there is a balance that people can learn, and that is the fine
line between confidence and arrogance.
If you talk
to very successful people, you may notice that the most successful people are
not the most arrogant. I have always
wondered why the middle managers of success are the ones who are the most
arrogant. Is it the fact that the very successful have nothing to prove since
everyone knows they are already successful?