You have never been poor, you don’t understand. If you tell a person who is about to die of thirst that if he works hard for a hundred kilometers, he will find an oasis, his endurance will not be able to hold it. He just wants to have a well now. If this well is enough to drink for a month, he will Willing to stay in the desert for a month. For a person who is so poor, the pleasure of eating a chicken drumstick and a pizza for lunch is enough to make him extremely satisfied, and he can be satisfied like this for several days. You call his situation complacent and unwilling to make progress. But think about it, your so-called struggle probably means working hard to earn an annual salary of one million, finding a good wife, paying off the loan for a house in Beijing's Second Ring Road within five years, and having two fixed travel times a year. I guess Wang Sicong would call your situation being content with the status quo and not making progress. You have never been rich, and you don’t understand. I once told a common truth in an answer that when we consider many things, we only speculate on unknown things based on our own limited experience. Many times our experience may not apply. For example, the mainstream view on Zhihu is fitness English learning, but if you really put it into real life, can this be considered mainstream? Whether you have money or not, this is actually the truth. For us, not studying is called not making progress. For those who are extremely poor, learning is not making progress. They should enter the society early to earn some money so that they have a slight chance of marrying a wife. Don’t they understand what you said about study and struggle? But their resource constraints cannot wait for that oasis. They are willing to stay in this desert for the rest of their lives and guard this well that may dry up. You might argue, what if the well dries up? If you don’t fight and fight your way out of the desert, your life will be ruined. But think about it carefully, does our struggle and pursuit come out of thin air? No, because we have water bottles in our bags. We know that the water is enough, and we may encounter sandstorms or get lost at most, but it is generally enough. But, for a person who is dying of thirst, many times he really can’t wait that much. Just like what is said in "The Great Gatsby", not everyone in this world has what you have. The previous sentence of this sentence is: Whenever you feel like criticizing someone, you must remember that not everyone in this world has the conditions you have. If we go deeper, the only thing that can be called universal human nature is that people want to constantly satisfy their own pleasure. For your level, your pleasure seems to be more "excellent" than those of people with worse family backgrounds, but in fact, there is no distinction between high and low pleasure, only situational differences.