Money makes your life easier. If you're lucky to have it, you're lucky. — Ariana Huffington

Money makes your life easier. If you're lucky to have it, you're lucky.

Author: Ariana Huffington

Insight: Most of us know this intuitively, but we rarely say it out loud. There's something almost taboo about admitting that money genuinely does make life better—that having enough cash means fewer midnight worries, more choices, and the ability to buy your way out of exhaustion. We're trained to believe hard work and character matter most, and they do, but they're not the same thing as a full bank account. Huffington's point cuts through the noise: luck plays a real role, and pretending otherwise just makes people who struggle feel like they're failing at something they should be able to fix through willpower alone. What's interesting is how this reframes "gratitude" itself. If you have money, the honest response isn't just to work harder or feel guilty about it—it's to actually recognize you've benefited from circumstances partly outside your control. That shift matters. It makes you less judgmental toward people in tighter spots and more realistic about your own advantages. And if you're currently without enough resources, understanding that this is partly about luck, not personal failure, can be oddly freeing. You're not broken. The system just doesn't always distribute chances equally.

Luck matters more than we admit

Money makes your life easier. If you're lucky to have it, you're lucky.

Most of us know this intuitively, but we rarely say it out loud. There's something almost taboo about admitting that money genuinely does make life better—that having enough cash means fewer midnight worries, more choices, and the ability to buy your way out of exhaustion. We're trained to believe hard work and character matter most, and they do, but they're not the same thing as a full bank account. Huffington's point cuts through the noise: luck plays a real role, and pretending otherwise just makes people who struggle feel like they're failing at something they should be able to fix through willpower alone.

What's interesting is how this reframes "gratitude" itself. If you have money, the honest response isn't just to work harder or feel guilty about it—it's to actually recognize you've benefited from circumstances partly outside your control. That shift matters. It makes you less judgmental toward people in tighter spots and more realistic about your own advantages. And if you're currently without enough resources, understanding that this is partly about luck, not personal failure, can be oddly freeing. You're not broken. The system just doesn't always distribute chances equally.

AI generated

Comments

Sign in to leave a comment or reply to one.

Sign in

Ariana Huffington

Arianna Huffington is a Greek-American author, syndicated columnist, and businesswoman best known as the co-founder of The Huffington Post, a pioneering online news platform launched in 2005. She has written several books on topics ranging from politics to wellness and is a prominent advocate for work-life balance and wellness in the workplace, particularly through her company Thrive Global.

Graph

Related