Most entrepreneurs are very alone.

Drake is God

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The Peculiar Loneliness of Entrepreneurship
Lonely.

God, that word sounds pathetic. It's not the first thing that comes to mind when pondering the entrepreneur. In fact, I don't believe I've read any articles specifically about loneliness and the entrepreneur, yet I believe it's a reality that exists ubiquitously. I know it certainly exists for me.

Most folks think of owners and CEOs as hard driving, autonomous, tough and energetic. Kind of mini-masters of the universe. And most of my successful business peers are that, in their very different ways. However, I believe there is a closeted yearning in most of us to connect communally, safely, discretely. Vulnerably.

Friendships, for entrepreneurs, are hard. We're busy. Most of us have primary commitments to our families and homes in our little free time and we can't even keep up current friendships. Most of our human contact is within our own firms and it is simply not practicable to have real, open, intimate friendships with employees, even your top executives. Being a boss requires a certain distance.

One of my all-time favorite TV series was HBO's The Sopranos. Tony Soprano is a kind of an entrepreneur when you think about it. I remember an early episode where Tony is worried about being yessed to death by his gang. He asks his wife Carmela what she thinks. She replies, "[Your subordinates] go around complimenting you on your new shoes, telling you you're not going bald, not getting fat. Do you think they really care? You're the boss! They're scared of you. They have to kiss your ass and laugh at your stupid jokes." Unfortunately Carmela is utterly right.

Furthermore, you often cannot really talk honestly about your business even to your wife, lover, or significant other. They truly cannot understand the unique frisson of terror that many of us wake to every day as we rise to try to methodically slay our individual business dragons. And even if they could understand, is it really fair to burden them with our existential anxiety? Each of us faces the prospect of possibly failing every day, but most of the time it would cause useless anxiety to share that with our familial intimates.

In his excellent book The Middle Class Millionaire, Lewis Schiff's research shows that middle-class millionaires (net worth between one and ten million dollars, according to Schiff) choose to let friendship to be crowded out of their lives by their maxed-out work and home commitments. Yet there remains a need for a place of safety to discuss and share specific personal business conundrums, as well as triumphs.

I have personally found some solace from business loneliness for six years through my affiliation with the Inc. Business Owners Council, which is a membership community of Inc. 5000 company owners. I almost didn't join for reasons of time, but it has been well worth the commitment. For me the reward has been a growing concatenation of peer friendship, humor, and allayed loneliness. I know there are other organizations, like EO and Vistage among others, that attempt to fill this business dearth. I have found a safe business intimacy with my peers healthful and whole-making.

An easeful peer community of shared assumptions and base experience is increasingly rare in our balkanized society. Yet the soulful amelioration of business aloneness is not a need that any owner should repress or shove aside lightly. It shouldn't be ignored.

To quote Mother Teresa, "The most terrible poverty is loneliness." Thank you, Mother Teresa.


Start a business brehs
 

Mess World

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Most entrepreneurs have business sense but not smarts they can never be geniuses because geniuses can't make money
 

010101

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the mistake is most people are raised to be group dependent

naturally hunters are solitary

also boardrooms and office spaces attract nerds and they have zero natural attraction to them

nobody wants to kick it with boring ass poindexters anyways

*

 

Mess World

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All you saying all geniuses are broke?

Yes true geniuses don't understand money

It's up to the wife or someone close to promote them

Most geniuses are homeless in the streets

A lot of homless are college professors who rather beg than teach
 

Chef

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"fukk nikkas, bytches too. All I got is this money, this'll do."
full
 

MoneyTron

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Figured this, tortured soul types. Plus intjs and the people with the personality types to do these kinds of things are 1% they probably don't have many they can relate to I guess.
That INTJ life. I know it all too well. :wow:

My uncle fits the OPs article very well. Dude has liquid 8 figures but I feel that he can count his real friends on his hand. Very smart guy but very eccentric as well.
 

King Poetic

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Most entrepreneurs are laughed at until they make it.

Most people go to work, come home and watch tv for 6 hours. Somebody that's working 40 hours and another 30-40 hours on the side trying to make things happen, people can't understand that.

Exactly... entrepreneurs never really sleep until their business is really taken off, but even then they still working to keep the business at the top
 
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