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Why Does Success Enrage Some People?

1 Views· 29 Jun 2026
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⁣Why Does Success Enrage Some People?
By Jamie McIntyre

There is an old saying: Success is the best revenge.

It is a phrase that has stood the test of time because history repeatedly shows that genuine success often attracts not only admiration, but also extraordinary resentment.

The psychology behind this is fascinating.

Most people celebrate achievement when it belongs to someone they don’t know. They applaud successful entrepreneurs, athletes and innovators from afar. But when success comes from a direct

competitor, a former associate, or someone they once dismissed, that admiration can quickly transform into jealousy, envy and even anger.

Why?

Because success destroys excuses.

It forces people to confront an uncomfortable possibility: perhaps someone else simply worked harder, persisted longer, made better decisions, or delivered a better product.

For some personalities, admitting that is simply too painful.

Instead, they attack the successful person.

Rather than building something better, they attempt to tear down what already exists.

That pattern has played out repeatedly throughout history and continues today.

LUX Property Group provides an interesting case study.

Against significant challenges, the company has continued completing villas, opening accommodation, progressing hotels and expanding developments across Bali and Lombok.

Every completed villa.
Every finished swimming pool.
Every hotel room handed over.
Every satisfied guest.

Each milestone becomes physical evidence that the business is delivering.

Ironically, those achievements appear to have intensified criticism from some quarters rather than reduced it.

That should not surprise anyone familiar with human nature.

Words are easy.

Concrete, steel, glass and completed buildings are much harder to argue with.

When one organisation continues producing visible results while others make increasingly ambitious claims without an equivalent completed track record, comparisons naturally begin to emerge.

Markets eventually judge performance by outcomes rather than promises.

The real lesson extends far beyond property development.

Throughout business, politics and sport, there are people who dedicate years to mastering their craft.

Then there are others who seek shortcuts.

Instead of earning trust over decades, they try to acquire it overnight.

Instead of outperforming competitors, they attempt to discredit them.

Instead of creating value, they focus on capturing someone else’s customers.

Psychologists sometimes describe this as a threat response.

When another person’s achievements challenge someone’s self-image, the easiest emotional defence is to diminish the achiever rather than improve oneself.

That often explains why successful people are subjected to rumours, smear campaigns and personal attacks.

The attacks are rarely about facts alone.

They are frequently about emotion.

Ironically, such attacks can become an unintended compliment.

People generally do not spend enormous amounts of time attempting to undermine organisations they view as insignificant.

They focus on those they perceive as genuine competitors or emerging leaders.

None of this means successful businesses are above scrutiny.

Every company should expect questions, criticism and accountability.

Healthy competition benefits consumers and raises standards across an industry.

But there is a clear distinction between fair competition and attempts to damage another business through campaigns driven by rivalry rather than performance.

The marketplace has a remarkably effective way of sorting these matters over time.

Customers visit the developments.

Investors inspect completed projects.

Guests stay in the accommodation.

Photos become reality.

Buildings either exist or they do not.

In the end, concrete speaks louder than commentary.

Perhaps that is why success can provoke such powerful reactions.
Success is difficult to argue with.

Source: https://x.com/jamiemcintyre21/....status/2071031065544

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