Matt and I started from the same place.
Same middle-class neighborhood, same public schools, same dreams of making it big someday.
We’d spend hours in his garage talking about the companies we’d build, the problems we’d solve, the money we’d make.
The difference? He actually did it.
Last month, I scrolled through Instagram and saw him closing on his third investment property.
Three months before that, it was the Tesla.
Six months before that, the startup exit that set him up for life.
Meanwhile, I’m still renting the same apartment I moved into five years ago, still checking my bank balance before grabbing coffee.
Here’s what nobody tells you about watching your best friend become wildly successful while you’re still figuring things out: It’s not the jealousy that gets you, because it’s something much more complicated.
The success gap creates a reality gap
When Matt first started making real money, we’d still grab beers every Friday.
But slowly, almost imperceptibly, our conversations started diverging.
He’d mention flying business class to a conference, then catch himself and downplay it.
I’d complain about my rent going up, then feel weird about bringing up money problems to someone who just dropped sixty grand on a watch.
It wasn’t that he became arrogant or I became bitter.
We both tried desperately to maintain the friendship we’d had since we were twelve but, when your realities diverge that dramatically, you start censoring yourself.
He stopped sharing his wins because he didn’t want to seem like he was bragging.
I stopped sharing my struggles because I didn’t want to seem pathetic.
The friendship didn’t end.
It just became a carefully choreographed dance where we both pretended the elephant in the room didn’t exist.
We’d talk about everything except the thing that had fundamentally changed, our vastly different life circumstances.
Your failures feel magnified
After my second startup crashed and burned, taking investor money and my confidence with it, I went into hiding.
What I haven’t shared is that Matt’s company was taking off at exactly the same time.
While I was writing apology emails to investors and laying off the three people who’d trusted me enough to join my venture, he was raising his Series A.
Every LinkedIn notification became a reminder of the growing gap between us.
My failure was my failure compared to his success.
When you’re both struggling, failure feels like part of the journey.
When one of you has made it, failure feels like evidence that you don’t have what it takes.
The worst part? Matt wanted to help.
He offered to introduce me to investors, to bring me in as a consultant, to literally write me a check to get back on my feet, but accepting help from your childhood friend who’s now lightyears ahead of you financially?
That’s a special kind of ego death I wasn’t ready for.
The timeline pressure becomes suffocating
We live in a culture obsessed with “30 under 30” lists and young founders who disrupt entire industries before they can rent a car.
When your best friend becomes one of those success stories, every birthday becomes a countdown timer to irrelevance.
At twenty-five, I told myself we were both still figuring things out.
At twenty-eight, when his company sold, I said I was just taking a different path.
Now, in my thirties, still trying to find my footing while he’s achieved financial freedom? The narrative gets harder to maintain.
What nobody prepares you for is how success compounds.
Matt’s early win gave him capital, connections, and credibility.
My early struggles gave me lessons, supposedly.
However, lessons don’t pay rent and they definitely don’t compound at the same rate as actual capital.
The pressure isn’t just internal either.
Other friends, family members, even strangers who know your history start asking the question nobody actually says out loud: “Why him and not you?”
As if success were as simple as following the same formula, as if we’d been given the same test and I’d simply failed to study.
You question everything about yourself
Here’s where it gets really dark.
When someone you grew up with, someone who had the same opportunities and faced the same obstacles, achieves massive success while you’re still struggling, you start dissecting every decision you’ve ever made.
Should I have stuck with that first startup idea instead of pivoting?
Should I have taken that corporate job for the stability?
Did I party too much in my twenties?
Why did I not network enough and chose the wrong co-founder?
Did I enter the wrong industry, the wrong city, or both?
You replay conversations from years ago, wondering if there was some crucial moment where your paths diverged.
Maybe it was that accelerator he applied to and I didn’t, maybe it was that mentor he cultivated and I ignored, maybe it’s something deeper, or maybe he just has something I don’t?
The comparison becomes pathological.
You find yourself studying his LinkedIn like an anthropologist, trying to decode the secret to his success.
You read the same books he mentions, follow the same thought leaders, and try to reverse-engineer the formula.
Success isn’t a formula, and that’s perhaps the hardest truth to accept.
The bottom line
Two months ago, Matt and I finally had the conversation we’d been avoiding for years.
He told me how isolated he’d felt after his success, how he’d lost friendships because people either wanted something from him or resented him.
I told him about the crushing weight of feeling left behind, about how his success had made me question my own worth.
We’re rebuilding our friendship now, but on different terms.
We acknowledge the elephant in the room instead of dancing around it.
He shares his wins without apologizing, and I share my struggles without shame.
It’s uncomfortable sometimes, but it’s real.
The truth nobody tells you about watching your best friend become a millionaire while you stay broke is that it forces you to confront the most uncomfortable questions about success, friendship, and self-worth.
It strips away the comfortable fiction that we’re all on parallel journeys, just at different speeds, and it reveals that success and friendship, despite what we’d like to believe, exist in tension with each other.
Here’s what I’ve learned: Tension can break you, or it can break you open.
The friendship might never be what it was when you were both dreamers in a garage but, if you’re both willing to do the work, it can become something different or maybe even something better.
A friendship that survives that level of disparity is a friendship that can survive anything.
Maybe the real achievement isn’t becoming a millionaire by thirty but, rather, it’s learning to be genuinely happy for your friend who did, while still believing your own story isn’t over yet.
















