People aren't addicted to success. They're addicted to their problems. That might sound harsh, but look around. If people truly wanted a different life more than they wanted to stay comfortable, the world would look very different. There's a reason a small percentage of people consistently create extraordinary results while most don't. It's rarely because they have more talent. It's because they're willing to do what others won't. They take responsibility. They stay consistent. They keep showing up when motivation disappears. They make sacrifices before they see rewards. Meanwhile, many people spend their energy complaining, blaming, criticizing, or explaining why success is easier for someone else. It's easier to find fault than to find discipline. Your future doesn't change when your circumstances change. It changes when your standards do. The question isn't whether you want a better life. The question is: What are you willing to give up to create it? Comfort? Excuses? Victim thinking? The identity that's keeping you exactly where you are? The life you want is waiting on the other side of the person you're willing to become.