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A 22-year-old feels she's failing by comparing herself to Kylie Jenner's success. Vaynerchuk deconstructs the absurdity of this comparison by highlighting Jenner's decade of inherited fame and resources. This unproductive envy steals time and energy from building one's own success.

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On platforms like Instagram, you follow specialists: an interior designer, a fitness guru, a CEO. Your brain combines these separate expertises into a single, impossible standard for yourself, leading to feelings of inadequacy because you're not an expert in every domain simultaneously.

A major source of modern anxiety is the tendency to benchmark one's life against a minuscule fraction of outliers—the world's most famous and wealthy people. This creates a distorted view of success. Shifting focus to the vast majority of humanity provides a healthier perspective.

We become envious of a curated, 1% version of someone's life. A stricter criterion for envy requires considering their entire reality—the daily grind, stress, and trade-offs. If you're unwilling to accept their 'war,' don't covet their 'wins'.

While comparing oneself to successful peers is a known mental health trap, comparing your reality to an idealized, perfect scenario (e.g., making millions while hardly working) is equally harmful. This creates a perpetual state of inadequacy that can cripple performance.

Wasting energy on envy is counterproductive. Winners are too busy building their own success to tear others down. This negative focus directly detracts from the effort you could be putting into your own venture, effectively stopping your progress while your competitors continue theirs.

Unlike seeing celebrities on TV, social media presents a curated highlight reel from the top 1% of people as if they are your peers. This normalizes exceptional outcomes, leading to widespread dissatisfaction when one's own life doesn't measure up to this impossible standard.

Humans learn what to want by observing others (mimetic desire). Social media expands our 'comparison set' to the entire world's curated highlights, creating a recipe for discontent. The solution is to be highly intentional about who you compare yourself to, carefully curating your inputs to align with your actual values and well-being.

Stop benchmarking your progress against others' routines and successes. Instead, gather data on your own variations in performance and well-being. By comparing your best days to your worst days, you can identify patterns and build systems that work uniquely for you, fostering growth rather than envy.

Citing Theodore Roosevelt, Rainn Wilson states that comparison is the "thief of joy." This is especially true in competitive creative fields. He advises that the first actionable step towards a better life is to cease comparing your journey to anyone else's.

Humans are wired to compare, making envy inevitable, especially with social media's highlight reels. This often manifests as passive-aggressive online behavior, which drains positive energy. Acknowledge your envy and transform it into a productive force by emulating the people who inspire it.