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Self-Esteem and the Entrepreneur
Isn't it funny how people think that being self-employed is so
cool? They think that you get to take lots of vacation time and
spend all of the profits. What they don't realize is that you
put in outrageous amounts of blood, sweat, and tears to get
there. They don't know that you have to take the blame for every
single thing that goes wrong. They don't know how many times you
fell flat on your face before making it work. They think that
you simply come up with a cute little idea over dinner one night
and within a couple of months you're flying high living the rich
man's life. The reality of the situation if very different.
Statistics consistently show that most successful entrepreneurs
failed a handful of times before finally finding that winning
formula. It's during the failure years that you earn all of
those future vacations and big fat salaries. Delayed
gratification takes on a whole new level, doesn't it?
One of the toughest things to learn during those failure years
is the self-esteem that comes with it. Self-esteem doesn't come
from having everything come easily and effortlessly. Real
self-esteem comes from having worked yourself until you're
almost in tears and then having someone tell you that you're
working too hard and ought to just quit. Real self-esteem is
explaining to your folks for the umpteenth time why you're still
poor and struggling at self-employment instead of getting a
'real job' and making lots of money as a salesman like your baby
brother does. Real self-esteem is deciding to learn from your
mistakes instead of giving up and quitting. Real self-esteem is
being financially bankrupt and giving it another try anyway,
because you just know that this time you're going to make it all
come together.
These are the types of events that form good businessmen.
Ladies, you know I'm including you in this too. Real self-esteem
is when you tell your husband that you are not going to give up
on your silly little dream and that it's not just a stupid
hobby, it's your company and your career aspirations. These
types of events give us the backbone it takes later to be able
to make the tough business choices that make the difference
between breaking even and making a profit. These types of events
teach you how to stand up for yourself and what you believe in.
Self-esteem is not having to justify your business decisions.
You know what's best for you and your company and you really
don't need anyone else's blessing, approval, nor support. If you
can't do it without someone cheering you, then forget it. It's
not called other-esteem or coach-esteem or friend-esteem. It's
called self-esteem because you have to muster it up all by
yourself.
You don't have to have a lot of self-esteem when you launch into
self-employment, but you'll learn it along the way or else
you'll never make it to that luxurious lifestyle that keeps
floating through your daydreams. To get started, you just have
to really believe in your product. Nobody can really be 100%
positive that they are going to succeed at their first attempt
at self-employment. After you have had a few years of failures
and some successes, you start realizing that you actually know a
thing or two compared to the newbies coming into your industry
behind you. There will always be someone who knows more then you
and someone who could learn from your experience. Self-esteem
comes from knowing that you can learn and that you will continue
learning until you get it right. Don't expect to feel perfectly
confident all of the time. It's all a big game and you have to
find the rule book while trying to master the game.
I once opened up a fortune cookie while struggling with the
decision of whether or not to launch my own company or not. The
message inside the cookie read, "The world needs your gift as
much as you need to give it." That little fortune has since
fallen apart and been thrown away, but I always have a newly
typed up version of it scotch taped to my computer monitor. It
has reminded me many times over, that I do this not for the
money, but because it is who I am. What else would I be doing if
not running this little company of mine?
Sometimes, we entrepreneurs keep going simply because it's who
we are. We are a different breed and it's part of how we define
ourselves. The way that others are musicians, or politicians, or
teachers, or doctors at the very depth of their soul, we are at
the depth of our soul entrepreneurs. We must play at that
particular game because it's what we do. Sometimes we have a
spiritual mission behind it, or a vision of the world being
better off for having purchased our environmentally safe
product, or a deep belief that people can be helped and nurtured
by the services offered by our company. It's who we are, it's
what we do. Self-esteem shows up later as a result of reflecting
on just how far we have come in our attempts to accomplish such
an important goal.
Self-esteem isn't knowing that you will succeed. It doesn't come
from having all of the perfect craftsman's skills and the
perfect level of education before starting your own company.
It's knowing that you can acquire whatever skills and knowledge
you don't yet possess. It's knowing that you are capable of
working hard and tenacious enough to see it through to the end.
It's knowing that as much as you appreciate the cheerleaders in
your life, that you'd keep going even if nobody else believed in
you. It's knowing that you don't know everything you need to
know but that you are capable of learning more. It's knowing
that the world needs your gift as much as you need to give it.
Copyright 2004, Skye Thomas, Tomorrow's Edge
About the author:
Skye Thomas is the CEO of Tomorrow's Edge, an Internet leader in
inspiring leaps of faith. To read more of her articles, free
previews of her books, and her astrology forecasts, go to
www.TomorrowsEdge.net. Webmasters interested in generating more
repeat traffic to their websites are invited to visit
www.TomorrowsEdge.net/horoscopes-generate-website-traffic.html.
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