Ask HN: How to Overcome Startup Regret?
6 comments
A poster asked something similar on the What if you could do it all over thread. [0]
Although I don't know much about your life, I am going to venture a guess that if you were in this position in the first place, you are bound have marketable skills and are very privileged. Note that I am not doing the "but the kids in Africa" argument but its reverse. You have already won a lottery and can focus on the prize you did win instead of robbing yourself of happiness by looking at even larger jackpots. I am not saying that you are not allowed to be sad, rather just trying to wake you up to the insane bounty you do already have.
Doesn't it fill you with joy to know that you are leading a freer and more comfortable life than 99.999...% of people who ever lived? The quality of your life is already fundamentally equivalent to those wealthy people you torture yourself about. i.e. you can more or less afford to have a life rich in chosen experiences and organize it the way you want. You already have access to all the good things in life other than the sort of megalomania and diminishing return based entertainment that billionaires like to spend their time with.
By definition it will be hard to stop your feelings through rational argumentation. So what I'm saying is to just wake up to the things you have.
[0]https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25548443
Although I don't know much about your life, I am going to venture a guess that if you were in this position in the first place, you are bound have marketable skills and are very privileged. Note that I am not doing the "but the kids in Africa" argument but its reverse. You have already won a lottery and can focus on the prize you did win instead of robbing yourself of happiness by looking at even larger jackpots. I am not saying that you are not allowed to be sad, rather just trying to wake you up to the insane bounty you do already have.
Doesn't it fill you with joy to know that you are leading a freer and more comfortable life than 99.999...% of people who ever lived? The quality of your life is already fundamentally equivalent to those wealthy people you torture yourself about. i.e. you can more or less afford to have a life rich in chosen experiences and organize it the way you want. You already have access to all the good things in life other than the sort of megalomania and diminishing return based entertainment that billionaires like to spend their time with.
By definition it will be hard to stop your feelings through rational argumentation. So what I'm saying is to just wake up to the things you have.
[0]https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25548443
Look at your friend's company and say "that's awesome, great for them", then move on with your life. Comparing isn't going to help if it's not used to improve yourself, and instead used as a way to meander in negativity.
Other opportunities will arise so just be on the lookout. You're around the right type of people for where you want to be so make sure you don't stop hanging out with then. As they say, you're just the average of the people you most associate with.
You could reflect on how you decided to not work with them. Do you have a clear framework or methodology that you use to guide your decision on choosing a startup? Does your framework/methodology need to be adjusted? Do you really want to go down the path? What in your eyes is true success?
I hope that helps.
Other opportunities will arise so just be on the lookout. You're around the right type of people for where you want to be so make sure you don't stop hanging out with then. As they say, you're just the average of the people you most associate with.
You could reflect on how you decided to not work with them. Do you have a clear framework or methodology that you use to guide your decision on choosing a startup? Does your framework/methodology need to be adjusted? Do you really want to go down the path? What in your eyes is true success?
I hope that helps.
Thank you for your comment.
In terms of framework, I tried to do what I thought was right, which was to make sure the company I was working at could fend for itself. Being more selfish would have helped, but I shouldn't tread that path...
I've yet to find a definition for true success.
In terms of framework, I tried to do what I thought was right, which was to make sure the company I was working at could fend for itself. Being more selfish would have helped, but I shouldn't tread that path...
I've yet to find a definition for true success.
No problem.
Defining success can be hard. Do you at least know if success is related to profitability, valuation, and/or target industry? For example, I know success for me is if the startup is profitable regardless of funding but needs to be in an industry that I don't find distasteful. For example, I would find it distasteful if I was making profit from selling payday loans.
By the way, what do you mean by the company must be able to fend for itself? Does that mean the startup has to have a patent or is addressing a market problem in an industry with high barriers of entry (government, defense, healthcare, etc) before you join as a co-founder?
In any case, you could include within your framework any of the below ideas:
>Interest in the startup idea
>Type of co-founder
>Amicability of the co-founder
Defining success can be hard. Do you at least know if success is related to profitability, valuation, and/or target industry? For example, I know success for me is if the startup is profitable regardless of funding but needs to be in an industry that I don't find distasteful. For example, I would find it distasteful if I was making profit from selling payday loans.
By the way, what do you mean by the company must be able to fend for itself? Does that mean the startup has to have a patent or is addressing a market problem in an industry with high barriers of entry (government, defense, healthcare, etc) before you join as a co-founder?
In any case, you could include within your framework any of the below ideas:
>Interest in the startup idea
>Type of co-founder
>Amicability of the co-founder
Trust the timing of the universe - sounds woo woo but that's how I get through. Nothing that's meant to be your's will pass you.
Rejoice that you are still friends. Sand Hill Road could be buried with friendships broken in startups.
How can I overcome regret for these decisions?