
Moonshot Mentor with Laverne McKinnon Does Success Feel Flat to You? đ¶
Have you ever hit a big milestoneâone you thought would feel amazingâand instead, youâre like, âWait, thatâs it?â
You got the job. You crossed the finish line. You checked the box. And five minutes later, youâre already on to the next thing. Or worseâyou feel a little empty, maybe even disappointed.
I donât think thatâs because youâre ungrateful. I think itâs because youâve been living by someone elseâs definition of success. And if youâre wondering where those definitions come from, look no further than the culture weâre raised in. It feeds us a script about what âmaking itâ should look like.
The Success Playbook We Rarely Question
In the U.S., we live in a capitalist-first culture. And whether we realize it or not, weâre spoon-fed a script about what âsuccessâ should look like. It usually sounds like this:
* Make a lot of money.
* Get the big job title.
* Work long hoursâbecause hustle equals ambition.
* Collect degrees and credentials.
* Show it all off with travel, brands, and lifestyle.
Now, none of this is bad. Honestly, some of it can be great. But hereâs the catch: if youâre chasing these things because you think you shouldâor because thatâs what everyone around you is doingâyouâre going to feel sorta hollow and empty when you get there.
The Comparison Game
And then thereâs comparison. We look around and think, âWell, they did it, so maybe I should too.â
Thatâs exactly what happened when I went for my MBA. Most of the business leaders I admired had one. So I thought, okay, I need that too. And while that degree never once got me hired, Iâll admit it gave me confidence in a boardroom.
But letâs be realâthatâs not the degree speaking. Thatâs me outsourcing my self-worth to a piece of paper. What I really wanted was authority and belonging.
Thatâs what comparison does: it makes you believe if you just had the thingâthe degree, the Fendi handbag, the fancy beach or ski vacationâyouâd finally feel successful. Spoiler: you will, but only if thatâs how you define success.
Redefining Success
Hereâs the shift: success isnât a moving target. Itâs a way of life. And the only way to feel itâreally feel itâis to define it for yourself.
Hereâs a little exercise I use with my clients (and myself):
* Write down your definition of success. Donât overthink itâjust get it on paper.
* Ask yourself: Why is this my definition? Write down the answer.
* Ask again: Why is that the answer?
* And one more time: Why is this the answer?
Each âwhyâ pulls you deeperâpast surface-level goals into the values and purpose underneath.
Let me show you how this played out for me.
Back in 2017, here was my definition of success:
* Land a fabulous, high-profile job.
* Finish a vomit draft of my book by the end of the year.
* Lose 10 pounds.
Hereâs what happened when I put that list through the âwhyâ filter:
High-profile job
* Why? Because I wanted to feel important and respected.
* Why? Because I thought if people admired me, Iâd finally feel secure.
* Why? Because underneath all the ambition was a fear that without status, I wasnât enough.
Finish a book draft
* Why? Because I wanted to be able to say I was an author.
* Why? Because I thought having âauthorâ next to my MBA would make me more legitimate.
* Why? Because I believed credibility came from labels, not from having something meaningful to say.
Lose 10 pounds
* Why? Because I wanted to look like I belonged in Los Angeles.
* Why? Because the beauty standards here are unforgiving.
* Why? Because I thought if I fit the mold, Iâd be more lovable.
Unpacking each of these so called definitions of success showed me that none of them connected to my actual values. They were all seeking external validation - and they were goals, not ways of being. No wonder I felt an odd sense of emptiness and like âwhat, thatâs it?â
Hereâs how I define success today: Listen with curiosity, courage, and compassion while creating content and experiences that help people love, learn, and laugh.
See the difference? Instead of goals shaped by comparison and culture, this definition is rooted in what matters to me. Itâs not something I can check off a list. Itâs something I can live into every single day.
The Bottom Line
Culture and comparison will always offer you a version of success. But if you donât stop and ask whether itâs really yours, youâre going to keep hitting milestones that donât mean anything to you.
So grab a pen. Write your definition. Ask why, and then ask why again. And donât stop until you land on something that feels like you or gives you clarity on what needs to be course corrected.
Because success isnât out there waiting for you at the next finish line. Itâs in how youâre living your life today.
If someone came to mind while you were reading thisâplease send it their way. You never know the impact a well-timed message can have.
Related Content
* Why Canât I Stick With It? đ
* Is Uncertainty Blocking Your Career Growth?
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Journal Prompts
Here are 4 journal prompts for paid Moonshot Mentor subscribers. These will help you dig deeper into your own definition of success and notice where culture and comparison may have shaped it.
