The Greeks will tell you that they invented hubris, but they're using a Greek word to describe it, so that's basically cheating. The sociological and technological concept of multiple discovery has shown over and over again that some of the fundamental tools of human development and social organization, for better or for worse, occurred independently all over the world. I'm sure if that's true for, like, fire, flush toilets and patriarchy, there's room for the idea of "being too big for one's britches."
Anyway, everyone knows making up words to mean specific emotional or cultural ideas is really a German thing.
What I'm contending with now isn't exactly hubris, but it is something of a readjustment of one's pride. It's not that I feel shame, exactly, for not having a job currently, it's more that my status as a non-job-having person is an automatically confusing one in 2026 America. People who don't work pretty much fall into two categories in modern capitalism: 1) independently wealthy heroes and 2) vampiric day-walking parasites attached to the neck of a functioning economy, the revolting and unnatural enemies of a healthy society who will kill the body entirely if we don't all collectively do something about it. "Do something about it" almost exclusively means "hold them up as figures of shame and rebuke during an election cycle," most vociferously by Republicans but to degrees by both major American parties, and then forget about them entirely in the meantime. And when I say "forget," as a former abject poor person in the 1980s, I really mean forget, in an active and hostile way. Especially if company is coming over.
Right now I'm neither poor, unhoused nor without income. I've got benefits and my regular salary still happening for another five-plus months as per the terms of my "separation" (you will have to envision the eye-roll there yourself). I exist in a liminal sort of cultural space that people don't really know what to do with. The state of affairs always requires an explanation, which people sort of understand. At first they're pretty excited as, on the surface, it sounds great and honestly, I don't always have the effort to talk about the ways in which the program I've opted in for is a pressured resignation caused by intolerable work conditions as a workaround against protections for federal workers against layoffs or firings almost certainly in violation of state and federal labor laws. I also find people tend to wander out of conversations when you say "labor law" at all, which, you know, fair enough. So I just let them be "happy" for me, in the short term, collect my bag of takeout food and walk out. Which of us started the conversation in this context is not an important part of the story, just leave it.
I've been in this culturally ambiguous sort of state before, so I have some muscles I can try to stretch and rebuild. I was a stay-at-home father for over eight years starting in 1999, which I can tell you, even in that modern, progressive day and age, nobody knew what to do with. I was still getting Mr. Mom references because people didn't know what to say, and that was after Michael Keaton had already been Batman for like 10 years. But that was when beer commercials were still basically just close-ups of sweaty boobs in bikini tops, so I guess it stood to reason. Patriarchy is a hell of a drug.
My days now are an exercise in humility, but not humiliation, to be clear. It's not quite apparent how much your job gives you status and identity as a currency to trade with strangers until you're without it. For most people, the goal might be to over-explain that you've got literal currency still coming in, in order to keep even the suggestion of the stink of poor-ness off you. But as a former literal poor and a formerly unemployed by choice, I'm in a unique position to let those kind of (supposed) judgments pass without effect. If I want to be socially humiliated, I could have a kid younger than my own children put me through a series of awkward poses and pelt me with edifying metaphors as I take tennis lessons I was given as a gift and now have time to pursue. This is America, after all. If you want to be humbled, sometimes you have to pay for it.