So someone explain to me, because I really don’t get it.
I am proud of the things I have put effort into and achieved - my qualifications, my job, my home. I am proud of things I have shared a part in achieving - the fact that my kids are nice people, the successes in my place of work. I am proud of the choices I have made that which have been successful in some way - a change of job at the right time, making a new life for myself after my marriage collapsed.
But I can’t for the life of me see why I should be proud of something that I have made no personal contribution to, and no choice about. I was born in the U.K. to English parents. I didn’t choose my parents, or their nationality, or my place of birth. I put no effort into becoming British. What is there to be proud of in that?
I quite like the advantages of being British. I live in a moderately civilised first world country, with buzzing cities and glorious countryside. I benefit from the culture and heritage of the nation. I value the fact that when I’m ill I can see an NHS doctor, and when I’m old I’ll get a state pension. Those are good things, for sure, but I can’t see that I have any right to be proud of them.
Maybe it’s just a language thing. I prefer precision. A lot of posters to this thread seem to conflate ‘I like having this stuff’ with ‘I am proud of this stuff’.