Takeaway: Startups & Relationships
While one of the goals of the Startical was to make peace with my relationship with startups, it turned out that during the same period I would also work towards making peace with my last relationship, period. Â As I explained as early as Day 3:
It’s quite clear to me now that over the last year or so, I was far from my best at dividing my time, energy and love between my startup and my relationship.
My chat with Doug in Detroit renewed my optimism that I might indeed balance a startup and a healthy relationship:
It feels like timing is the most critical aspect of that delicate balance, with a highly flexible and opportunistic schedule required.
One of my great challenges was that I'd feel like I let my partner down when I couldn't balance that schedule quite right. Â Reading The Power of Now on the Wolverine from Detroit to Chicago I realised:
By letting myself identify with [past disappointment and future fears], I feel pain, I fulfil the prophecy and let my partner down, and this in turn compounds the pain.
When we met up in San Francisco after four months apart it wasn't easy, but being face to face was far preferable to our previous communication through screens. Â Thanks to the personal development I had done during the Startical and in the preceding months, as well as the calmness of spirit I felt from my travels, after a few days we were able to restore much peace and understanding.
On Day 26, when circumstances made it difficult for me to recall all my recent revelations from introspection, that peace and understanding was quickly put back in question. Â Despite my efforts, by Day 28 the situation still seamed bleak. Â However on Day 29:
once I finally cut out all my own bullshit and accepted everything shared with me as including love and good intentions, progress was made
What has all this taught me? Â Startups are hard, but they're rewarding because they push you to be your best. Â Relationships are hard too. Â Especially when they push you to be your best as well. Â It's challenging to be your best at two things simultaneously, but it is of course possible when you accept that your best means your best. Â Only you know what is your best, and if you're honest with yourself, only you can judge if your best promotes a healthy relationship with your startup and your partner.
At the end of the day all you can ask is to be your best. Â If that allows you to enjoy a healthy relationship, then lovingly accept the rewards along with the challenges. Â If not, then you have three options and, in this case, I'd say it's between the first two.