“There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility is being superior to your former self.” — Ernest Hemingway
We admire winners: the person promoted, the athlete on the podium, the friend who seems to have it all together. It’s easy to measure success as a scoreboard—taller stacks, louder accolades, more followers. Ernest Hemingway’s line flips that scoreboard on its head. True nobility, he says, isn’t about comparing yourself to others; it’s about outgrowing who you used to be. That shift moves success from external validation to an inward, lifelong practice: learning, improving, and becoming a bit better than you were yesterday.