Others fear, I am greedy! The lower you are, the more you shouldn't pretend to be a good person.


People are divided into two types: animalistic and social.
At the bottom, fighting for survival, animal instincts dominate—selfishness, predation, ferocity. This is not bad; it's fate.
Once you are full and stable, animal instincts retreat, and social qualities emerge—love, dignity, kindness—then they begin to grow.
So, don't be naive.
If you're in the jungle, don't pretend to be a sheep.
If you want to survive, you must become a lion, tiger, or hungry wolf. If it's time to fight, fight; if it's time to be ruthless, be ruthless. Otherwise, you won't even get a lamb leg.
You show mercy? You'll starve. You want dignity? You'll freeze to death. You're kind? No one will remember you.
When you kill your way out with jungle rules, accumulate enough capital, and step out of the bottom, then you can change the rules.
When you reach the next level, it's about integrity, value exchange, and kindness.
If at that time you still play with jungle tactics—sneakiness, predation, breaking rules—that's called filth, that's called vulgarity, and no one will play with you.
Look at the primitive accumulation of capital—none of it is bloodless.
But after they clean up their act, their descendants are gentle, elegant, and dignified.
It's not that people's hearts have changed; it's that circumstances have changed.
So, don't complain about human darkness.
Your coldness today is to qualify you to be kind tomorrow.
Strive to move upward, not for money, but to escape the class that "must be evil."
Remember:
At the bottom, don't fear being a wolf.
At the top, don't forget to be a person.
Do you agree? Share your "jungle moment" in the comments.
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