Lukas looked at the receipts. She was right. He had been so focused on the feeling of being at the top that he’d forgotten the ladder was still shaky.
Lukas sat in the back of a dimly lit lounge, the air thick with the scent of expensive tobacco and the sound of clinking glasses. Across from him sat his mentor, Elena. On the table between them lay a small mountain of receipts—the physical remains of a "successful" weekend spent trying to look the part of a mogul.
"There’s a difference between celebrating a win and burning the stadium down to stay warm," Elena replied. She leaned forward. "You spent three months of disciplined work in four hours of vanity. You didn't just spend money, Lukas. You spent the time it took to earn it. You smoked your own life."
True success isn't measured by how much you can afford to "burn" in a night, but by your ability to convert your resources into something that lasts. When we focus on the "how" (the process and the discipline) rather than the "show," we stop wasting our potential and start building our future.
"The world is full of people who can blow through hundreds of euros in an afternoon," she said, standing up to leave. "But the world is run by the few who know how to turn that same amount into an engine. Stop being the fuel, Lukas. Start being the engineer."
As Lukas watched her leave, he didn't reach for another drink. He picked up the napkin, tucked it into his pocket, and walked out into the cool night air. The smoke was gone; for the first time in months, his vision was clear.
Lukas laughed, though it felt a bit tight. "Come on, it was a celebration. We worked hard for that commission."