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The Weight of Being the First

 No one tells you what it really feels like to be the first. The first in your family to go this far. The first to dream in HD. The first to chase something bigger than survival. People will clap for you, sure. They'll say you're smart, you're special, you're destined for greatness. But they won't always see the weight.

They won't see the late nights you cry alone, wondering if you’re doing the right thing. They won’t see how sometimes success feels like a prison. A beautiful one, but a prison still. Because now that you’ve started climbing, going back is not an option. And going forward? That’s a mountain no one around you has ever climbed.

You carry dreams that aren't just yours. Your siblings are watching. Your community is watching. Your country is watching. And you can’t afford to fall because they think your fall means the ladder was never safe. You don’t just represent yourself. You represent possibility.

I grew up around people who were brilliant but broken by the system. People who never got a shot. People who settled because the world didn’t let them breathe past their potential. And now here I am, standing at the edge of opportunities they never had, and I ask myself: Am I really ready for this? Do I even belong here?

Because the truth is, being the first often feels like being the only. You get into rooms and no one looks like you. You bring up ideas and people think you’re reaching. You speak with fire and they tell you to tone it down. But how do you tone down when your entire bloodline has been waiting for someone to light up?

They say “be humble.” But they don't understand that humility is not the absence of confidence. It's the presence of history. I know where I come from. I’ve seen hunger. I’ve seen death. I’ve seen kids lose their dreams before they even had language for them. I’ve walked barefoot and dreamed in silence. So when I speak loud now, it’s not pride. It’s memory.

I’m tired some days. Tired of being the one who always has to figure it out. Tired of answering everyone’s questions. Tired of being “the smart one” when sometimes I just want to be held. Tired of needing to be strong for others when no one asks if I'm okay.

But here’s the part I never forget: I asked for this.

I said I wanted to change things. I said I wanted to break generational cycles. I said I wanted to build something no one in my bloodline has seen before. And that’s the thing about being the first. The road ahead isn’t mapped out, because you’re building it.

Every win is a brick. Every failure is a blueprint. Every lesson is a light for the ones coming after you.

Sometimes I imagine the future. A version of my life where my kids never have to wonder if they can dream big. Where they don’t have to ask for permission to speak, to study, to lead, to exist loudly. That’s what keeps me going when I’m falling apart inside.

I’m learning that healing is part of the legacy too. I’m learning to rest without guilt. To cry without shame. To ask for help even when I’m used to being the answer. To forgive myself for not knowing everything. And to love the version of me who’s still growing into all this weight.

Because this weight is not just pressure. It’s purpose.

It’s the reason I wake up with fire in my chest and pain in my bones. It’s the reason I keep showing up, even when the world feels cold. It’s the reason I believe, deeply, that what I’m building will matter one day.

And maybe you’re reading this as someone who’s also the first. Maybe you’re tired too. Maybe you’re doubting your path. But let me tell you this:

You’re not alone. We exist. Scattered across countries, villages, cities. Young people carrying continents in their notebooks and dreams in their backpacks. We’re building bridges with broken tools and refusing to stop.

Keep going.

Cry if you must, rest if you need, scream if it helps, but don’t quit. Because your courage is ancestral. Your fight is holy. And your future, though uncertain, is sacred ground.

You’re not just the first.
You’re the beginning of everything that comes after.


Author’s Note

I wrote this on a day when my heart was heavy, but my vision was still clear. This is what it feels like when you’ve outgrown where you started, but haven’t yet arrived. If this spoke to you, you already know why you’re still standing. Keep going.

Jimmy X.
For my mom regardless 🙅🏾‍♂️.

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