Humility is mostly about being very honest about how much you owe to luck.
Humility
The architecture of wisdom
There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility is being superior to your former self.
Never take compliments personally. People compliment you because they like you, not because you're perfect.
Humility is not thinking less of yourself, but thinking of yourself less. It's the quiet confidence that doesn't need to announce itself.
The truly humble person doesn't know they're humble - the moment you recognize your own humility, you've lost it.
Humility is the soil where wisdom grows. Arrogance is the concrete where nothing takes root.
The humble listen to understand; the arrogant listen to reply. One seeks wisdom, the other seeks victory.
Humility is recognizing that every person you meet knows something you don't, and every situation has something to teach you.
The strongest foundation for confidence is humility - knowing exactly what you don't know makes what you do know more reliable.
Humility is the courage to admit when you're wrong, the wisdom to learn from it, and the strength to change because of it.
The humble person measures their worth by their growth, not their achievements; by their character, not their accomplishments.
Humility is the recognition that your success is built on the contributions of countless others - seen and unseen.
The most powerful leaders are the most humble servants, because they understand that true authority comes from lifting others up.
Humility is the quiet understanding that you are both more important than you think and less important than you imagine.
The humble mind is always learning; the arrogant mind is always defending what it already thinks it knows.
Humility is the ability to take criticism without resentment and praise without pride.
The greatest wisdom often comes wrapped in humility, because it acknowledges how much remains to be discovered.
Humility is the anchor that keeps success from turning into arrogance and failure from turning into despair.
The truly humble don't need to prove anything to anyone - they're too busy improving themselves.
Humility is the recognition that every achievement contains an element of grace, every success a measure of fortune.