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  • Staying in balance

    André Casal
    6 replies
    This is how people explain the experience of entrepreneurship: with the Dunning-Kruger Effect. You might be familiar with this picture. We have this confidence bias where we start off very confident we’re able to do something, while imagining what we have to do. We’re in Peak of Mount Stupid. When we start doing the thing and are faced with reality, we realize it’s much harder than we initially thought. Down we go into the Valley of Despair. This is where most people quite. They look at that Slope of Enlightenment and they feel it’s too much for them. So they submit to their emotions and call it quits. But for someone like me, who vowed to never give it on his dreams, the size of the mountain does not matter. What no one told me is that the Slope of Enlightenment isn’t, in fact, a smooth line. It's a sloped sinusoidal with ups and down, going up! The past couple of weeks have been extremely exciting. Every single day I have faced those kinds of challenges where I have no idea how to solve a particular problem. Every day has been a rollercoaster of “Oh shit, I have no idea what I’m doing” to “Oh, this actually might work” to “Look at that! I’ve made it!”. What this means I’d like to spell out some insights I’ve had during this process. The first, and perhaps most important is this: even thought I’ve never worked as hard as I have this year, I haven’t felt much stress. In fact, I’ve been energized, excited, and the happiest I have ever been in my life. While pushing myself to my limits. So stress is not what I thought it was. Stress does not come from pressure. Stress comes from ignoring things which should'nt be ignored. The other insight is about what is at the limit of my capacity. What kind of person we become at that limit. For context, I am, generally, fairly disciplined. My friends often say I’m the most disciplined person they know. When I’m not pushing myself to the limit, I do pretty much everything that’s important to me, right: I go to bed early, I sleep well, wake up early, meditate, reflect and journal, workout, work until 18h00 and then spend time with my partner, family and friends, do chores (clean the house, put clothes to wash, go grocery shopping, etc), and go on adventures. Not pushing myself to my limit is a pretty comfortable and happy place to be. But I don’t seek mere happiness. I seek to realize - in both senses of the word: to understand and to make real - myself. So pushing myself to my limits and growing from that experience goes from making me happy to making me extremely excited, vibrant, and determined about life, and the role model I want to be for the people around me, specially my future kids. The insight I’ve had is that at the edge of my capacity, I tend to be less mindful and drop important things. This is normal: if my brain’s capacity is at its peak, not much brain compute is left to think about other things. So workouts, going to bed early, eating healthy, and spending time with family and friends gets dropped in exchange for hard work late into the night. The consequence of this is that my happiness suffers and I feel more disconnected. A thought that often goes thought my mind is this: “André, if you drop the important stuff, life becomes meaningless, no matter how hard you work. Keep your shit together”. 😂 I’m not yet sure how to solve this, but acknowledging it is a huge first step. I’ll ask my friends for advice on this ♥️ And now I'm asking for your too 🙌

    Replies

    David Michael Johnson
    Totally feel you on this rollercoaster 🎢 The key is maintaining discipline with the important stuff even when you're pushing yourself to the limit. For me, non-negotiables are 7+ hrs sleep, daily exercise, and quality time with loved ones. Block those in your calendar and treat them as sacred. Then go all in on work in the remaining focused blocks. It's a constant balancing act but so crucial for sustaining peak performance without burning out. You got this 💪
    André Casal
    Hey @davidmichaeljohnson, I hear you! Gotta keep the main things the main things: sleep, exercise, eating healthy and nurturing relationships :)
    David Nelson
    It sounds like you prefer a balanced leadership style, where you maintain equilibrium between guiding your team and giving them autonomy.
    André Casal
    @david_nelson5 Yes, and being a role model - practice what you preach, right? I don't have a team though, just peers :)
    Jessica Young
    Whoa, that entrepreneurship journey sounds intense but rewarding! 🚀 I think the key is finding your own balance that lets you push yourself while still taking care of the important things. Maybe schedule non-negotiable self-care time each day, even just 30min, for the essentials like working out, eating right, and connecting with loved ones. 🧘♂🥗👨👩👧👦 And don't forget to celebrate the small wins along the way! 🎉 You got this, just keep checking in with yourself and adjusting as needed to stay in that sweet spot. 💪😌
    André Casal
    @jessicayoungq "Sweet spot" is exactly the right expression, because when you're in that spot, you feel energized, engaged, jacked up, focused, and ultimately happy 🔥😄