Growing up in Westport, Connecticut, I learned very early that success came with a specific definition.
It wasn’t something people discussed openly every day.
It didn’t need to be.
The expectations were woven into nearly every conversation, every family gathering, and every achievement that earned praise.
Success looked like influence.
Success looked like wealth.
Success looked like building something people could see and admire.
My father embodied that definition perfectly.
Over decades, he built one of the most respected real estate businesses in the region. His name carried weight throughout the community, and his accomplishments were frequently discussed with admiration.
My older brother seemed destined to continue that legacy.
From the time he was young, he showed interest in the business. He attended meetings, learned the industry, and gradually became the person everyone expected to carry the family name forward.
At family dinners, conversations naturally drifted toward his accomplishments.
A successful sale.
A new property acquisition.
An industry award.
Another milestone.
Every achievement was celebrated enthusiastically.
People listened.
People applauded.
People remembered.
Meanwhile, my own accomplishments often received little more than polite acknowledgment before the discussion moved elsewhere.
For a long time, I wondered whether I was simply following the wrong path.
Unlike my father and brother, I had no interest in real estate.
The work never spoke to me the way it spoke to them.
Instead, I found myself drawn toward something entirely different.
I became a third-grade teacher in Hartford.
To many people, it seemed like an unusual choice.
Teaching offered none of the financial rewards associated with my family’s business.
It wasn’t glamorous.
It didn’t generate headlines.
It didn’t impress people at social events.
But it gave me something else.
Purpose.
Every morning I stepped into a classroom filled with curious children eager to learn about the world around them.
I taught reading.
Writing.
Math.
Problem-solving.
But more importantly, I taught confidence.
Kindness.
Patience.
Resilience.
I watched children overcome fears.
Develop friendships.
Discover talents they didn’t know they possessed.
And every small breakthrough felt meaningful.
The work mattered.
Even when few people recognized it.
At family gatherings, however, teaching rarely generated much excitement.
While discussions about investments and business opportunities stretched late into the evening, conversations about my classroom often ended quickly.
My family measured success differently.
To them, achievements were visible.
Quantifiable.
Public.
They could be displayed through profits, awards, and status.
The quieter victories that filled my days rarely fit that framework.
Eventually, I stopped seeking validation from them.
Not because I stopped caring.
Because I grew tired of chasing approval that never seemed to arrive.
Instead, I focused on building a life that felt authentic to me.
A life that reflected my values rather than someone else’s expectations.
During those years, one person consistently reminded me that my choices mattered.
My grandmother, Eleanor.
She was unlike anyone else in our family.
Where others rushed through conversations, Eleanor listened.
Where others focused on accomplishments, she focused on people.
When she asked questions, she genuinely wanted answers.
Nothing about her