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Really enjoyed reading this.
I like his points on how early environmental exposures/influences as well as genetics heavily contribute to your psychological state in future. This is especially interesting in the context of decision making, stress response, and impulse control.

31.7.2025
My Success Story (and my rant about success stories)
Want to know how I succeeded in poker?
I got interested in the game and worked really hard at it.
I hired the best coaches I could find and absorbed everything they taught me. I studied – but only when I felt motivated, following my natural drive and passion rather than forcing myself through drudgery.
I loved the game, so the work never felt like work.
I surrounded myself with the right people. Other players who shared my obsession and pushed me to get better. We’d spend hours dissecting hands, challenging each other’s assumptions, building each other up.
I was disciplined about not chasing losses. I analyzed my play constantly, identifying leaks, plugging holes in my game. I read books, watched videos, used tools — my curiosity and love of the game drove me to constantly seek improvement.
That’s roughly the story, right?
The one you’ve heard a thousand times from successful people in every field. The one that gets packaged into YouTube content and motivational speeches.
And it’s all true.
But it’s only half of the story.
I also had a lot of advantages that I didn’t earn and couldn’t control.
My dad was a math genius and an extremely gifted teacher. He taught me everything I would learn in elementary school by the time I was five. I learned square roots before my classmates learned addition.
I came from a stable household where my mom nurtured my empathy, self-awareness, and emotional stability.
And emotional stability, it turns out, comes a lot easier when you have life stability — when your basic needs are met, and you’re not worried about rent or food or whether you and your family are safe at home.
My family was well off. Not ultra-rich, but well off enough that they paid for my college, room and board, books, everything. So when I started playing poker at 19, I was playing with savings I had accumulated because I’d never had real expenses. There was no financial pressure on me whatsoever.
When I sat down at the poker table, I wasn’t thinking about my rent payment. I didn’t have monthly expenses eating into my bankroll. I wasn’t afraid to lose.
I also inherited some pretty good genetics. The kind that meant on any aptitude test, I’d score in the 99th percentile. Pattern recognition, logical deduction, mathematical thinking… even emotional regulation – all of that came naturally to me in ways that they don’t for most people.
I found poker and fell in love with it. Obsessed, really. And I had the freedom to pursue that obsession with everything I had, with no external stressors pulling me away from the game. No sick parents to care for. No siblings depending on me. No job I couldn’t afford to quit.
I found peers who loved it too – great mentors and study buddies who helped me along the way.
And almost certainly, I ran well at the start.
I deposited fifty dollars and played ten-dollar sit-and-goes. Lost that fifty in a few sessions. Then I deposited a hundred dollars and played more ten-dollar sit-and-goes.
I didn’t lose those 10 buy-ins.
If I had, this story might be very different. But I ran hot enough in those early sessions to build confidence, to keep going until I developed the skill to have a meaningful edge, to turn that hundred into thousands, then tens of thousands, then millions.
So that’s the complete story of how I succeeded.
The first version – the one about hard work and surrounding yourself with the right people – sounds like something you can replicate if you just follow the steps.
The second version… well, that’s a lot harder to make happen.
This is the problem with success stories
I keep seeing content creators – educators, motivational speakers, successful entrepreneurs – sharing their journeys. And they mean well – they really do. And they usually have valuable things to teach.
But they almost always lead with the first version of the story.
“Running a business is easy – here’s my simple three-step system.”
“Just do what I did and it’ll all work out.”
“I went from zero to founding this multimillion-dollar company with these five tricks. Here’s exactly how you can too.”
(And though I’m careful, I’ve probably created content that implied similar. Short-form content with nuance is hard.)
And I watch these presentations, and I can tell from the way these people speak that they’re not “normal.” They’re often 1-in-1000 intellects. Maybe 1-in-10,000.
So when they’re talking to an audience of a thousand people, maybe one of those people has their natural aptitude and other advantages. The other 999 are not going to find it as easy as they did.
It’s like if Shaq made a video called “How I Learned to Dunk” and said, “I worked hard. I stretched and exercised. I practiced jumping. And then I held a basketball, jumped, and dunked it. And here’s the exact stretching and gym routine I used.”
I’m five-foot-six. His stretches won't help me dunk. (though to be fair, I haven’t tested that)
But it’s so much worse when it’s not something physical, because the 999 people don’t know they’re five-foot-six, metaphorically speaking.
They think they just need to follow the system better. Work harder. Be more disciplined.
Speaking of which, some people also have what seems like endless discipline and willpower. They can 'just do it' when others struggle with consistency. They stick to their routine no matter how they feel.
But willpower isn't equally distributed either. Some people's brains are wired for delayed gratification. Others grew up in environments that taught them discipline from an early age. And some people simply have fewer competing demands on their mental energy.
Yes – discipline is a skill you can develop – but we all start with a different floor and ceiling. We need to plan for where we’re at, not what we “should be able to do.”
What happens to the 999
When it’s not easy for them – when they follow the steps and don’t get the results – they don’t blame the incomplete story they were told.
They get really down on themselves. They feel shame. They feel like they’ve failed — like they are failures. They might lose motivation entirely.
And this is tragic, because with better framing, with more honest expectations, many of them could have gotten to a pretty great place for themselves. Maybe not to the very top, maybe not to where the content creator ended up, but somewhere really good – somewhere they’d be proud of.
Instead, they give up. Or worse, they take on debt because they know it will work out. They keep banging their heads against the wall, wondering why they can’t just “follow the system” and get the promised results.
But here’s what I don’t want you to do
I don’t want you to read this and think, “Well, Phil had all these advantages, so I guess I can’t succeed.”
That’s not the point. That’s not an excuse.
I have had setbacks, disadvantages, and struggles that I didn’t share above – not because I’m embarrassed of them, but because I know how fortunate I am, all things considered, and I know that blaming your circumstances – even when those circumstances are real and significant – doesn’t help anybody. It certainly doesn’t help you.
The point is to be honest about where you’re starting from so you can make better decisions about where you’re going.
Maybe you’re playing the game on hard mode. Maybe you don’t have the same advantages I had. Maybe you’re starting from a tougher spot, with more obstacles, fewer resources.
So what?
You can still do it. You can still improve from here, improve next year and the year after that. You can still get somewhere amazing if you focus and dedicate yourself to it.
The path might be different. It might take longer. You might need to be more creative, more persistent, more resourceful than someone who starts with more advantages.
But it’s still a path you can take.
Taking responsibility for your success
Here’s the balance I’m trying to strike: acknowledging that we don’t all start from the same place, while also taking full responsibility for what we do with what we have.
I had advantages. You might have different advantages. Or you might be starting from a much tougher spot. But wherever you’re starting from, that’s your game to play.
The player with a short stack shouldn’t play the same strategy as the chip leader. But they can still come out on top.
The work still matters. The dedication still matters. The right mindset still matters.
You just might need to work a little differently than the person telling you how easy it is.
What I wish more successful people would say
Instead of “All you have to do is this. It’s really that simple,” I wish more content creators would say:
“Here's my story. Here were the advantages that helped. Here’s what I struggled with. And here are my learnings and a way that I teach others to do it. Take what's useful, adapt the rest. Your path will probably look different than mine - and that's okay.”
That’s a less marketable message. It’s harder to sell. But it’s more honest. And it would save a lot of people from unnecessary shame and self-blame.
And like I said, most of them mean well. And despite different circumstances, many of them are the exact people you want to be learning from…
It’s great to learn from someone who has used their advantages to not only figure something valuable out, but to distill it in a way that is much easier to understand.
Why this matters
I guess what I’m really trying to say is this:
Don’t blame yourself for your starting position, but take accountability for reaching the finish line.
Learn from people who’ve succeeded, but remember that their path might not be your path.
Work with what you have, not with what you wish you had.
And maybe, if more successful people were honest about the role that advantages played in their stories, fewer people would blame themselves when the journey turns out to be harder than promised.
I don't know why I felt compelled to write this. Maybe because I see too many good people giving up on things they could actually achieve, or beating themselves up because they “should” be able to do something.
Or maybe because I'm tired of success stories that sound like fairy tales.
Real life is complicated, and real people deserve honesty about what they're facing.
Anyway, that's my rant.
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