"If you feel you are down on your luck, check the level of your effort"
About this Quote
Brault’s line has the clipped authority of a pocket-sized moral reckoning: before you blame fate, audit your own output. The phrasing matters. “Down on your luck” is a colloquial, almost cozy way to describe misery, the kind of phrase people use to soften a hard run of setbacks. Brault answers that softness with a corrective that sounds like a quick diagnostic test: “check the level of your effort.” Not “your choices,” not “your strategy,” not “your circumstances” - effort, the most controllable variable and the one most flattering to condemn in others.
The intent is motivational, but the subtext is bracingly unsentimental: luck is often the story we tell ourselves when we don’t want to face the more ordinary explanation that we didn’t push, persist, practice, or show up. It’s a nudge toward agency that also carries a quiet rebuke. “Check” implies measurement, like effort is a gauge you can read honestly if you stop performing innocence for yourself.
Contextually, it fits a very modern self-help economy where personal responsibility is both empowerment and ideology. The quote works because it compresses a whole worldview into a single swap: from cosmic injustice to personal calibration. Its risk is the same as its appeal. It can energize people who need a shove, and it can also erase structural bad luck - illness, discrimination, layoffs - by implying the problem is always internal. Brault’s strength is that he makes the excuse of “luck” feel flimsy; his blind spot is how often luck is real, and effort isn’t the only lever.
The intent is motivational, but the subtext is bracingly unsentimental: luck is often the story we tell ourselves when we don’t want to face the more ordinary explanation that we didn’t push, persist, practice, or show up. It’s a nudge toward agency that also carries a quiet rebuke. “Check” implies measurement, like effort is a gauge you can read honestly if you stop performing innocence for yourself.
Contextually, it fits a very modern self-help economy where personal responsibility is both empowerment and ideology. The quote works because it compresses a whole worldview into a single swap: from cosmic injustice to personal calibration. Its risk is the same as its appeal. It can energize people who need a shove, and it can also erase structural bad luck - illness, discrimination, layoffs - by implying the problem is always internal. Brault’s strength is that he makes the excuse of “luck” feel flimsy; his blind spot is how often luck is real, and effort isn’t the only lever.
Quote Details
| Topic | Work Ethic |
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