I was born in Hong Kong. When I was fourteen, my family immigrated to Canada.
At the time, it didn’t feel like a big decision.
I was a kid. I wasn’t thinking about opportunity, economics, or long-term outcomes.
I just knew my world changed overnight.
It took years before I understood what that move really meant.
Most people believe success comes down to effort.
Work harder. Push longer. Try more.
Effort matters. But effort inside the wrong environment has a ceiling.
Where you live quietly shapes what becomes possible for you.
Not because people in big cities are smarter.
Not because they work harder.
But because the environment either multiplies your effort or limits it.
I’ve seen this play out countless times.
Two people. Same intelligence. Same work ethic. Same job. One lives in a global city.
The other lives somewhere small and static.
One keeps compounding forward.
The other feels busy but stuck.
It’s not personal. It’s structural.
When you live in a place filled with capital, talent, competition, and access, you absorb opportunity without trying.
Your standards rise. Your network expands.
Your thinking stretches.
When you live somewhere comfortable but constrained, life can feel “not bad.”
Until you step outside of it.
That’s when the ceiling becomes visible.
Here’s the uncomfortable part.
Sometimes you didn’t choose where you live. Sometimes where you live chose you.
So people tell themselves stories.
“It’s peaceful here.”
“The cost of living is lower.”
“I don’t need much.”
Sometimes those stories are true. Often, they’re just a way to make staying feel easier than changing.
Waiting is the most expensive cost in life.
Waiting until you’re older.
Waiting until you have more money.
Waiting until the timing feels right.
For most people, waiting quietly turns into a lifetime.
The younger you are, the cheaper it is to move.
The fewer obligations you have, the lighter change feels.
Later, everything carries weight. Family. Children. Mortgages. Expectations.
That’s why so many people settle.
Not because they want to.
But because leaving starts to feel impossible.
I’m not telling you to move.
I’m not telling you to immigrate.
I’m not telling you what decision to make.
I’m just pointing out something most people never stop to examine.
Where you live isn’t just a lifestyle choice.
It’s a long-term strategic decision.
It shapes your income.
Your network.
Your perspective.
And the future your children will quietly inherit.
For me, leaving Hong Kong and growing up in Canada wasn’t about comfort. It was about exposure. It widened my world long before I knew how to name it.
Effort still matters. Character still matters.
But environment decides how far both can take you.
And most people never question it.