English idiom for 'bad consequences stemming from too much ambition' [closed]

I'm looking for an idiom that is equivalent to the Portuguese:

Quem tudo quer, tudo perde.

Who wants everything, loses everything.

It basically points out that being too ambitious will have bad consequences: not only does one not get what one's striving for, but one also ends up losing what one already had (and probably took for granted).

This idiom should be usable in everyday speech.


Solution 1:

Nearest equivalent is grasp all, lose all

which reflects Aesops “Much wants more and loses all.”

and a more modern version by Vikrant Parsai He who wants everything every time will lose everything any time.

Subsequently a search found others matching with Grasp all, lose all.
see http://updatedwordsforum.forumotion.com/t150-grasp-all-lose-all-quem-tudo-quer-tudo-perde

Solution 2:

Bite off more than you can chew. The Cambridge Dicionary says:

to try to do something that is too difficult for you:

[Example] I think he's bitten off more than he can chew taking all those classes. (Emphasis added.)

This is a very common idiom, and, it is understood that the results will be bad. However, the Portuguese idiom says that the results will be catastrophic (will lose everything), and the English idiom does not say or necessarily imply catastrophe. However, one possible outcome in the example above is that the student will flunk out or go on probation, which is nearly catastrophic.

Other uses might be, for example, starting a business at too ambitious a level:

She has bitten off more than she can chew, leasing so much space in this market. She'll go bankrupt.

Or, bringing in an example pertinent to the season:

You're going to fix a six course Christmas dinner for 30? All by yourself? You've bitten off more than you can chew!

One can imagine the chaos in the kitchen if the cook is not highly experienced!

Solution 3:

I keep thinking about "like Icarus flying too close to the Sun".

But it would likely not be used in casual conversation.