I’m thirty-five years old. I graduated from MIT with degrees in computer science and management. Bootstrapped a company as a solo founder and made enough to not worry about money for a while. I’ve worked at Microsoft, helped scale multiple VC-backed startups, and now I’m consulting and building civic technology platforms in Brooklyn.
By any reasonable definition, I am an Elite.
I’m also someone who spent most of his twenties and early thirties doing exactly what I’m about to criticize. I optimized. I climbed. I told myself the stories. So this isn’t written from some mountaintop. I simply woke up one day and realized I’d been coasting on potential for my entire career. And, strangely, almost everyone I know is doing the same thing.
My MIT friends are partners at consulting firms, senior engineers at Google, portfolio managers, biotech directors, surgeons. They make $300K, $500K, a million a year. They own homes in the right zip codes, have kids in the right schools, everything arranged with the precision you’d expect from people who are very good at arranging things.
By conventions measures, they’ve won. And yet, they’ve done almost nothing with the winning.
I don’t mean that raising children is trivial or that professional excellence is worthless. I mean something narrower: there are problems in governance, infrastructure, public health, education, climate, and democratic function where solutions exist, but the people with the right skills aren’t working on them. Market forces won’t simply deliver the answers. The particular abilities elites have are what’s missing, and those abilities are pointed elsewhere.
Whether this constitutes a moral obligation is a harder question than I once thought. I’ll try to take it seriously later rather than just asserting it (and write more on that soon), but for now I’ll say what I observe: a colossal gap between what my cohort could do and what we actually do.
I’m writing this because the choices we made in our twenties have calcified into the lives we lead in our thirties. “I’ll do something meaningful later” has become “I guess this is what I do.” Someday turned into never and most of my friends haven’t even noticed the switch.
I noticed. Maybe my timing was lucky, finding financial security right when the questions got harder. Maybe I’m contrarian. Maybe I’m wrong about all of this and the essay is just another evasion in fancier clothes. I don’t think so, but I lets hold that open.
Over the past few years I’ve raised these questions with friends, and let me tell you, when you show someone the gap between who they are and who they could be, they don’t exactly thank you. They get defensive. Angry sometimes. A few stopped talking to me.
Their reaction is informative. Something is being protected. Some story is under threat. In this essay, I want to look at what that story is.
If you’re an elite reading this, you’ll feel defensive in places. I did writing it. I just ask that you notice what the defensiveness is protecting.
This word gets used loosely and usually as an insult, so let me be specific.
An elite, the way I’m using the term, has some combination of four things.
Cognitive ability in the top few percent—demonstrated by credentials, professional achievement, or just observable skill.
Economic resources past the point where survival is a question and choices become real, maybe $500K in net worth or $200K in household income.
Social capital: knowing people, getting introductions, reaching decision-makers.
Institutional position: a role where your choices affect others. Managing teams, allocating money, setting policy, shaping what people read.
Few people have all four. The quant at a hedge fund might have three but limited social reach outside finance. The thought leader might have influence and connections but modest savings. Most of the people I’m writing about have at least two or three. They’ve been given more than nearly anyone who has ever lived.
In America there are maybe 7 million of them. Two percent of adults. So, what are they doing with it?
Before I answer, some clarifications:
Elites aren’t necessarily rich. A tenured professor making $130K qualifies—she has cognitive ability, institutional standing, and connections in her field.
Elites aren’t usually famous. In fact, most are invisible. The senior McKinsey partner, the VP of Engineering at a tech company: real influence, zero public recognition.
Elites aren’t villains. Most are decent by conventional measures. To be clear, the problem isn’t that they’re causing harm. The problem is that they’re not doing anything with what they’ve been given. There’s a big difference between evil and falling short. Most elites fall into the latter camp.
And elites aren’t uniquely responsible for the world’s problems. Many problems are structural in ways that go beyond what even mobilized elites could fix. But they have an outsized ability to help. They’re not using it.
This is the population I know best.
Walk through any major tech company, consulting firm, bank, law practice, or hospital and you’ll find people who followed the path with total fidelity. Top grades, top schools, top internships. A steady climb through institutions that rewarded them for doing what was expected.
They believe the system works. Not loudly, but quietly, the way people believe in something that has worked for them personally. Meritocracy isn’t a position they argue. It’s air they breathe. They earned everything they have. Others could do the same. The outcomes are roughly fair.
Their abilities are real. They can master difficult things. They hold complex systems in their heads. They work hard. They navigate politics well. And they spend all of that on making their employers slightly more profitable and keeping their own lives running smoothly.
Ask about this and the answers are consistent.
“I’m providing for my family”—on four times what providing requires?
“I’ll do something meaningful eventually”—a target that moves with every promotion.
“I give to charity”— giving money is good, but money is the least scarce thing these people have. Their minds and their networks are what’s sitting idle.
Some of them believe the ladder is the point. I think of these as the true believers. They’ve never experienced friction with the path. Everything has confirmed their choices. Reaching them is probably impossible.
Others know better. The Golden Handcuffed people took the high-paying job for a few years. They always meant to pivot, but suddenly their lifestyle required $300K to maintain. The tuition. The mortgage. Their spouse’s expectations. Each choice was reasonable on its own. Together they formed a cage.
The true believers have convinced themselves there’s no gap between what they can do and what they’re doing. The handcuffed see the gap daily. They still have idealism. It comes out after a few drinks:
“This wasn’t the plan.”
“Somewhere along the way the temporary became permanent.”
Their tragedy is specific: awareness of the trap without the velocity to escape it.
“Three more years until the kids are in college.”
“Once the mortgage is gone.”
“After the next vesting cliff.”
The threshold keeps moving, but it was never a threshold. It was a story that makes staying feel like a choice.
Money is ability. Large amounts of it—$5 million, $50 million—are stored energy that could be aimed at almost anything.
The Working Wealthy have $5 to $50 million, usually from equity or decades of saving. They still work, though they don’t need to. Work gives them identity. Wealth gives them a safety net so absolute that risk has become purely hypothetical.
They could fund risky ventures. Absorb years of uncertain progress. Take time off to learn a new field entirely. Almost nobody in history has had this kind of freedom.
They do nothing with it. Philanthropy, when it exists, runs toward prestige: the alma mater building, the hospital wing with their name on it. Board seats at nonprofits where they attend quarterly meetings and change nothing.
“I want to be strategic about it.”
“I’m still figuring out what I care about.”
At some point the figuring out becomes the thing. The deliberation is the inaction.
Founders who got rich—$50 million to $10 billion—are a different animal. They believe in their own judgment with a conviction that approaches religion. The market proved them right once, and they’ve extended that proof to cover every domain. Education. Healthcare. Governance.
Sometimes the confidence is earned. Founders tolerate ambiguity better than the credentialed class. They act on incomplete information. They build from nothing. These are real qualities.
But the founder’s recurring mistake is thinking that because they built one thing, they can build anything. Software does what you tell it. Companies, especially software companies, give you feedback fast. You test a feature and know by Tuesday. Governance doesn’t work this way. Public health doesn’t work this way. Democracy is not a pure engineering problem. It’s a human one, tangled in politics and history and power, and the feedback loops that served the founder well don’t exist in these domains.
The capital holders have the one resource hard problems need most—the ability to absorb risk over long periods—and they won’t spend it. The money compounds in index funds. More freedom accumulates, and it also goes unused. They have pharaoh-level optionality and they convert it into: slightly more elaborate comfort.
Here is the case where every excuse collapses.
Former executives, senior partners, professors, surgeons, founders who cashed out. They have cognitive ability sharpened by decades of practice. Financial security. Networks built over forty years. And the thing every handcuffed professional fantasizes about: time.
Nobody owns their calendar. No mortgage demands a certain income. The kids are grown. The career is done. “Later” has arrived.
What do they do? Golf. Grandchildren. Gardening. Board seats where their name appears on letterhead. Travel. Some of these are pleasant. None require anything resembling the ability these people have.
A retired law firm partner represents forty years of regulatory knowledge, negotiation skill, institutional memory. A retired tech executive has decades of experience building and managing organizations, allocating resources, understanding how systems fail. These people could walk into almost any struggling civic institution and see immediately what’s broken.
instead, they’re in Scottsdale golfing.
This is the cleanest test case.
“I’m providing for my family.” Provided for.
“No time.” All the time in the world.
“Golden handcuffs.” Cut.
“I’ll get to it later.” You’re in later. You’re living there now.
Once every structural excuse is gone, what’s left is the choice itself. Which suggests that the structural explanations I’ve offered for other categories—incentives, lifestyle inflation, institutional lock-in—are real but incomplete. Something else persists when every barrier is removed.
Part of it is identity collapse. Someone who spent forty years as a senior partner doesn’t leave a job when they retire. They leave a self. The institution gave them structure, status, social life, a daily rhythm, a clear answer when someone asked what they do. Retirement strips all of that at once. The vacuum usually fills with routine, not purpose.
Part of it is that institutional competence is institutional. The executive who ran a ten-thousand-person division discovers she doesn’t know how to start something from scratch. Find collaborators without HR. Chase a goal that nobody assigned. The skills were real but they needed scaffolding. The scaffolding is gone.
There are roughly ten million Americans over sixty-five with professional backgrounds that qualify as elite. The civic sector—local governments, nonprofits, school boards, planning commissions—is starved for the exact skills these people have. What costs $500 an hour in the private sector is absent in the public one. The match is obvious. Almost nobody makes it.
Some elites don’t hold money or institutional positions. They shape what the educated class thinks about.
Academics, journalists, public intellectuals, authors, conference speakers. Their influence is indirect. They don’t manage budgets or teams. But they set the terms of discussion. Which problems count as serious. Which questions are worth asking.
At their best, this is essential work. At their median, something less. Academic incentives reward citation counts over relevance. Media incentives reward engagement over accuracy. The intellectual marketplace favors ideas that make the audience feel smart over ideas that make the audience uncomfortable.
The specific failure here is that the idea-making class sets the moral weather for every other category. When intellectuals build arguments for why capable people have no special obligations—when “tend your garden” gets elevated to high wisdom—they give everyone else permission to stay comfortable. The ideas that win among elites are, on the whole, ideas that excuse elites. This isn’t some grand conspiracy. The market for ideas, like every other market, gives people what they want. And elites want to be told they’re fine.
Some looked at the default path and walked away.
The lifestyle designers built lives around personal freedom. No bosses, no commutes, days structured around exercise and projects and travel. They solved the problem of their own existence somewhere on the flight to Mexico City. Then stopped. Their gift to the rest of the world is simply proof that escape is possible. It’s something, but it’s thin.
The contemplatives went a different direction—depth instead of freedom. Monastics, poets, scholars pursuing questions with no market value. Their wager is that my entire framework—impact, scale, outcomes, even identify or duty—is shallow. That awareness and beauty justify themselves. I can’t fully answer this claim. I include it because honest argument requires admitting when your premises are contestable.
Then there are the people still in motion. Young professionals in their late twenties with growing suspicion that the destination isn’t worth the trip. The disaffected, same credentials but already hollow, going through motions at work, numbing in the off-hours. The burned out, who pushed too hard at things they didn’t believe in. Even the ideologically captured, who found a framework and padlocked themselves inside it.
These are all at inflection points. The question this essay raises isn’t theoretical for them. It’s the thing they’re already circling.
This behavior actually makes sense once you understand the machine that produces it.
Elite selection—admissions, recruiting, promotions—filters for specific things: conscientiousness, risk aversion, ability to optimize within defined parameters. People who question the game don’t survive the game. The philosopher who asks why the hedge fund exists doesn’t get hired there. The lawyer who questions the adversarial system doesn’t make partner. By the time someone reaches elite status, decades of selection have produced exactly the traits that make them good at climbing and useless at questioning.
Compensation structures do the rest. At $500K a year your reference point completely shifts. Your peers earn similar amounts. The neighborhood, the schools, the vacations stop being things you chose and become things people like you simply have, or do. Maintaining the lifestyle requires maintaining the income. Maintaining the income requires keeping the job. Keeping the job requires not rocking the boat.
But the deepest, most insidious thing, is that there is an unspoken pact among high-achieving peers that goes like this:
I won’t question your choices if you don’t question mine.
Anyone who breaks this pact threatens everyone. They get dismissed or excluded, because if the challenge has merit, then everyone is implicated.
Underneath the structural explanations is something more personal. When you’ve spent twenty years on a path, the path becomes your identity. The senior partner isn’t someone who happens to have the job. She has become the job. Questioning the value of her work is questioning her worth as a person.
The defenses that kick in are uniform across every elite subtype.
“You don’t understand how complex these problems are.”
“I’ll get to meaningful work eventually.”
“That’s for activists, not people like me.”
“You’re projecting your issues onto me.”
“We just have different values.”
Below all of it: fear. That ten, fifteen, or even twenty years went toward the wrong target. That outside their institutional scaffolding they might just be ordinary. That attempting something meaningful would expose them. That they don’t care as much as they believe they should.
And for many, the worst fear: that they once wanted more. That somewhere under the credentials and the income is a person who had real ambitions and locked them away. The ones who react most violently to being challenged are often the ones who, a decade ago, talked about changing things.
The quiet ones who never claimed to want more handle the conversation fine. They made peace honestly. “I want a simple life” was always the answer. There’s no buried self to disturb.
But the ones who burned once—who had the fire and made accommodation after accommodation—those are the people who can’t stand the question.
I recognize this because I’ve been on both sides. I’ve been the uncomfortable one at the dinner table asking hard questions. I’ve also been the one squirming when someone else asked them.
The operating ethics of the professional class go roughly like this. Be a good person. Be a good parent. Be a good neighbor. Don’t hurt anyone. Build a comfortable life. Provide for your kids. That’s where it ends. Anything beyond this is projection.
This is a morality of non-interference. Harm avoidance. Private virtue. It draws on liberalism’s deepest ideas: the individual as the center of meaning, the family as the core obligation, the public sphere as a space of tolerance rather than shared purpose.
It’s philosophically serious. I want to say that clearly, because the argument is weaker if I pretend the opposition is stupid. The harm-avoidance framework has deep roots, strong intuitive pull, and the advantage of asking very little from people who are already overextended.
But there’s an assumption inside it: that the world doesn’t need you specifically. The “good person, good parent, good neighbor” model works as a complete ethics only if you think the larger systems are fine, beyond repair, or someone else’s problem. It doesn’t account for the possibility that you’re among the few who could actually do something, and that your absence has consequences.
The ancient world saw virtue differently. Not just “don’t harm.” Excellence. The full use of what you have in service of something good. The virtue of a knife is to cut well. The virtue of a runner is to run fast. The virtue of a person with extraordinary ability is... to be a good neighbor?
There’s a concept missing from the modern elite’s moral world. Vocation. The idea that what you can do has some bearing on what you should do.
I find this compelling. Let me try to break it before building on it.
The strongest counter isn’t “I earned my position and owe nothing.” That’s easy to handle by pointing at the role of luck—who chose your genes, your parents, your country of birth?
The real counter is: who decides what “meaningful contribution” means?
I defined it earlier as problems at scale where solutions are under-resourced and markets won’t deliver. But that definition privileges breadth over depth. It privileges the public over the private. Why is working on civic infrastructure more meaningful than raising three children who go on to live generous, thoughtful lives? Why is building a democracy tool more important than creating a work of art that changes how people see?
I don’t think these objections are fatal, and here’s why.
Raising good kids is valuable. It’s also something that millions of people without elite abilities do, often better. The thing that only someone with an elite’s particular combination of skills and resources and networks can do—that’s left untouched. Parenting is a universal human responsibility. It doesn’t exhaust the question “what did you do with everything you were given?” any more than “I was kind to people” does.
The artist creating transformative work is, in my view, using their ability fully. I have no complaint. The contemplative pursuing depth may be doing something I can’t assess. I said so earlier and meant it.
But these are edge cases. The overwhelming majority of elites aren’t raising children with transformative intention, creating great art, or pursuing contemplative depth. They’re optimizing ad targeting, drafting merger documents, and managing product roadmaps for software that makes exactly nothing better. The “who decides what matters?” objection is philosophically interesting. In practice it’s being used to defend the ordinary.
So here’s what I believe.
Ability doesn’t create infinite obligation. I’m not arguing for self-sacrifice or welfare maximization. That produces burnout and resentment and it doesn’t work.
What ability creates is a presumption. If you have extraordinary skills, resources, networks, and freedom, the default of using them only for personal advancement and family comfort is the position that needs defending. The burden falls on the person with the gifts, not on the person asking why they’re buried.
An MIT-trained engineer spending Saturday mornings at a food bank is doing something good that any able-bodied person could do. None of the abilities that make that person distinctive are involved. They’re giving their labor when they could be giving their mind.
This distinction matters. Not between doing something and doing nothing. Between generic help and specific help. Between showing up with your hands and showing up with the thing that’s actually rare.
Equal moral worth means equal obligations.
Equal worth doesn’t mean equal obligation. Someone who can swim has a duty to try saving a drowning child that a non-swimmer doesn’t. The swimmer isn’t morally superior. They’re differently positioned. Ability is relevant to what you should do.
If everyone just handled their own life, things would be fine.
Maybe in a thought experiment. We live in a world with coordination failures and collective action problems that don’t reduce to personal virtue. A thousand good fathers have zero effect on climate change. The framework ignores the shape of actual problems.
I don’t know enough about these issues.
True right now. But you learned corporate law or distributed systems or financial modeling. You could learn housing policy or democratic reform. “I don’t know enough” is usually a decision to not learn. Not to try.
Any contribution I’d make would be too small.
An engineer working on carbon capture makes a different contribution than one optimizing click-through rates. A lawyer drafting housing policy has a different impact than one drafting merger documents. The contributions aren’t infinite. They aren’t zero. They compound if enough people shift.
Raising my kids IS my contribution.
I respect this maybe more than I initially did. Parenting is serious work. But it’s a universal obligation, not a distinctive use of elite ability. The question isn’t whether you should raise your kids well. Obviously. The question is whether that’s the end of it, given everything else you have. For someone with average ability and average resources, maybe it is. For an elite, I don’t think so.
When I raise these questions with friends, they bristle. Some get angry. Some go quiet for weeks.
There’s a social contract among high-achieving peers. A mutual agreement that everyone’s choices are valid, success is relative, nobody gets to judge how another person spends their talents. When I express expectations I break that contract.
The defenses arrive quickly. “You’re projecting.” Maybe, but my motives don’t change their situation. “You’re being judgmental.” I’d call it expectation, which is different. Judgment looks backward. Expectation looks forward. “We have different values.” Then tell me what yours are, not as descriptions of how you live, but as reflective commitments. Then tell me how your life expresses them.
And then the one that deserves its own discussion: “Okay. Tell me what you expect me to do.”
This looks like engagement. Someone ready to hear ideas.
It isn’t. If I give a specific answer—”work on housing policy,” “use your legal training for X”—they’ll find the flaw. There will always be a flaw. Nothing real is flawless.
“That organization is too small.” “That cause is too niche.” “The theory of change isn’t clear.”
Notice the asymmetry. The standard for my suggestion is perfection. The standard for their current life is adequacy. Their job doesn’t have to be meaningful. It just has to be normal. The alternative has to be bulletproof.
And if I stay general, they say I’m being vague. No answer satisfies.
In earlier drafts I stopped there. I called this a trap and moved on, which was rhetorically satisfying and substantively worthless. If I’m going to spend this many words arguing that elites should redirect their abilities, I owe more than a diagnosis of bad-faith conversation.
So let me try to be concrete.
I’ll start with my own situation because I’ve been talking about other people long enough.
I’m building two things. Bloc is an open 311 system, budget analysis tool, and soon a participatory budgeting platform that lets citizens engage directly with how their tax dollars get allocated. I’m piloting it in New York City. DeepDebate is a platform for structured civic discourse that tries to surface the strongest version of every position rather than the loudest.
Both might fail. Bloc might be used by ten civic nerds and ignored by everyone else. DeepDebate might be another “AI for democracy” project that sounds good in a pitch deck and dies on contact with actual citizens.
Here’s what the work looks like from the inside. About half my time feels productive: building, talking to city officials, analyzing NYC budget data to find the specific inefficiencies that make government distrust rational. The other half I feel lost. Unsure whether any of it matters. Wondering if I should go back to scaling SaaS companies where the metrics were at least clear.
The pay is nothing. The status is zero—try explaining “civic technology” at a dinner party full of finance people. The feedback loops are brutal compared to the startup world. Build something, show it to a council member’s office, they’re interested but they have seventeen other priorities, wait weeks for a meeting that gets rescheduled twice.
I describe this because earlier drafts gave the impression I was writing from some position of accomplished impact. I’m not. I’m in the middle of uncertain work that might produce nothing. The uncertainty matters, because one thing that keeps elites frozen is the belief that the only worthy alternative to their current path is an equally prestigious, clearly impactful new path. Anything less feels like a downgrade.
The truth: meaningful work usually looks, from the outside and from the inside, like fumbling. Slow progress interrupted by doubt. Nothing like the clean success stories elites have trained themselves to pursue. Accepting this—that the work might not impress your peers, might not succeed, might not be legible as a smart career move—is the actual cost of entry. Not money. Not time. Ego.
If you’re a working professional: you don’t need to quit. Start with ten hours a week. Find a civic organization or nonprofit working on a problem you understand, and offer your actual skills. Not money. Not Saturday manual labor. The thing you’re professionally excellent at. If you’re a lawyer, draft policy. If you’re an engineer, build tools. If you’re a manager, help an organization that can’t afford anyone who knows how to run things. The hardest part isn’t finding the opportunity. It’s accepting that it won’t come with the status your professional work does.
If you’re handcuffed: do the math on what you actually need versus what you spend. The gap between “current lifestyle” and “could live comfortably” is usually enormous. Many people in this position could take a 40% pay cut and still live better than 95% of humans who have ever existed. Whether you’re willing to trade extraordinary comfort for ordinary comfort in exchange for work that doesn’t hollow you out—that’s the real question.
If you have capital: fund things too risky for traditional philanthropy. Seed civic technology. Back people trying to fix government rather than route around it. Your money is most useful where it’s most patient. And stop treating nonprofit board seats as social activities. If you’re on a board, push for something.
If you’re retired: this is where I feel the most conviction. You have everything. Time, skills, resources, networks. Local governments are desperate for management talent. Nonprofits are struggling with problems their staff lack the experience to solve. School boards and planning commissions shape daily life for millions and are chronically understaffed by anyone with experience running complex operations. Your institutional knowledge—how to manage a budget, run a meeting, navigate a bureaucracy—is worth more than most nonprofits’ annual consulting spend. Twenty hours a week would transform an organization.
If you’re young and uncommitted: this is the most important window you’ll have. The switching costs are low. The identity hasn’t fused with the institution. The lifestyle hasn’t inflated to match the income. Build the alternative now. Take the lower-paying job with the interesting problem. Spend a year somewhere that matters before locking into finance. The plasticity is real and it closes faster than anyone warns you.
I’d be dishonest if I claimed everyone can be moved.
The true-believer Ladder Climbers—still ascending, no friction, no doubt—won’t respond to anything I can write. The ideologically captured have their answer and the door is shut.
The people I’m writing for: young professionals already disillusioned but frozen in place, whose defenses haven’t hardened yet. Mid-career people whose rationalizations are starting to crack, who’ve bumped against the reality that “later” is running out. And people in the aftermath of something that broke the old pattern—burnout, illness, job loss, divorce—who are rebuilding and might build differently.
What these people need isn’t inspiration. They need a specific thing to do. A peer group that makes the choice feel sane. A gradient instead of a cliff. Proof that the leap is survivable. And economic viability, because the material constraints are real and any path that ignores them will fail.
The last one might matter most. Not someone who succeeded—success is too abstract to be useful. Someone who is in it, visibly, and hasn’t collapsed. That’s partly why I described my own situation with the uncertainty left in. The polished version would be more impressive. The honest version is more useful.
This essay is a mirror. The uncomfortable kind.
It’s not a theory of social change. It doesn’t solve the coordination failures and structural injustices that make hard problems hard. If mobilizing elites were enough, we’d already have a playbook.
What I’m saying is more limited: a significant portion of the most capable, most resourced, most connected people in this country contribute almost nothing beyond their narrow professional roles. This is a waste of astonishing proportions. The waste persists not mainly because of external constraints—though those are real—but because of stories people tell themselves, social contracts they maintain with their peers, and identities they’ve built around their positions. All of which make the waste feel normal.
I’ve tried to avoid two temptations. The first: positioning myself as someone who figured it out and is dispensing guidance. I haven’t. I’m in the middle of uncertain work. The second: undermining my own argument so thoroughly that nothing stands. I do believe ability creates a presumption of obligation. I do believe most elites fall short. I think it’s worth saying even imperfectly.
One question is all that matters here. Is it possible that the life you’re living is smaller than what you’re capable of?
If the answer is even a tentative “maybe,” then: what would you do if you took that seriously?
Not what I want you to do. What would you do, given what you specifically have, if you believed it came with obligations you aren’t meeting?
The answer might be small. Ten hours a week. A different use of money. A willingness to speak where you’ve been quiet. Or the answer might be large. A career change. A reorientation of what the next decade is for.
You’re capable of more than you’re doing. I believe this about you. It isn’t a judgment. It’s an expectation. And I think you believe it too.
To the people already in it—already spending their abilities on something that matters, absorbing costs, taking risks with unclear outcomes—this essay isn’t about you. Except to say: your example matters more than you think.
Every person who makes a different choice makes the next one easier for someone else. Every path that doesn’t collapse is a path someone else can consider.
If you know people ready to move, help them. If you’re building something that can absorb capable people who want to redirect their lives, keep building. If you’re proof that the leap is survivable, be visible about it.
The gap between what elites could contribute and what they do contribute is enormous. This essay won’t close it. Maybe for a few people it names what they couldn’t name.
Naming is where it starts.