The Metamorphosis

Becoming an Entrepreneur, by Matt Mireles

A Rigged Game

I wrote this post as a comment in response to Jordan Cooper's original post, entitled: Full of Potential = Full of Shit….

Little Story: I went to Catholic school my whole life. My sophomore English teacher was this awesome redheaded old lady named Ms Callahan. Her job, as she saw it, was as much about making us into men and shaping our character as it was teaching us to read and write. She taught us her own tweaked version of Kolhberg’s 6 stages of moral development, the details of which I’ve forgotten, except for one: Honor. Being honor-driven is about seeking recognition from society and your peers. The problem with honor is that it depends on the whims and perceptions of others, which are inherently fickle and are based on impressions not necessarily correlated to anything substantive. It’s not what you’re talking about exactly, but it’s related…

As I see it, the problem with your line of reasoning is that (at least as the post reads) is the that the measure you’re using to judge yourself and your life––the goal post, as it were––is other people’s visible “accomplishments.” Fuck that.

But first, a diatribe: The system for people like us who go to these fancy schools and are fast tracked to enter the elite/ruling class of society encourages precisely this kind of thinking. In school, you get grades, you please the teacher/professor/TA/etc. We’re trained like little monkeys to jump through the hoops and get into Ivy League School X and then get hotshot internship Y and then move along to prestigious job Z (cough *ibanking*). Each accomplishment is a badge of honor that you use to measure yourself against others and thus determine your worth. David Brooks wrote a great article about this phenomenon called “The Organization Kid.” Read it: http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200104/brooks

The problem with the whole fucking system is that it leads even smart fucking people like yourself to look around, compare yourself and say “Shit, this whole race is fucking hopeless. I’m fucked.” Which, by the way, it is; and if you judge yourself on that measure, you are.

But the thing is, at the end of the day, it’s not about fucking Chris Hughes or fucking Mark Zuckerberg or whatever other genius you want to compare yourself to. There will always be someone smarter/stronger/better faster. The game is rigged, my man. Don’t play it!

The real question is: Who are you? Did you pursue your dreams? Do you love being alive? Are you the person, the goddamn human being you want to be? Is this the fucking life you want to live? Or is it a fucking game you’re playing to impress people and live up to what you think the world expects from you?

Now, I’m just a dude trying to make it like everyone else, but in my opinion, these are the questions you should be asking, reflecting upon and wrestling with. It’s hard game, but at least it’s one you can win.

-Matt

via jordancooper.wordpress.com

  • http://profile.typepad.com/davidfano David Fano

    Nicely said! and…. SpeakerText is awesome btw :)

  • http://profile.typepad.com/davidfano David Fano

    Nicely said! and…. SpeakerText is awesome btw :)

  • http://profile.typepad.com/1233532474s12769 Matt Mireles

    Thanks dude. Much appreciated. I think this topic hits a nerve with entrepreneurs. It also reminds me of a conversation I had w Brad Feld a while back: http://www.metamorphblog.com/2009/12/endurance-sports-entrepreneurship-and-the-need-for-achievement.html

  • http://profile.typepad.com/1233532474s12769 Matt Mireles

    Thanks dude. Much appreciated. I think this topic hits a nerve with entrepreneurs. It also reminds me of a conversation I had w Brad Feld a while back: http://www.metamorphblog.com/2009/12/endurance-sports-entrepreneurship-and-the-need-for-achievement.html

  • John

    I am a little shocked at your understanding of honour. Honour should not based on what you perceive to be the value systems of your peers, but on an internal sense of rightness. It has to be carefully analysed and rethought through your entire life.
    Perhaps try reading Jane Austen’s work. Many of her characterisations revolve around an internal and an external understanding of honour.

  • John

    I am a little shocked at your understanding of honour. Honour should not based on what you perceive to be the value systems of your peers, but on an internal sense of rightness. It has to be carefully analysed and rethought through your entire life.
    Perhaps try reading Jane Austen’s work. Many of her characterisations revolve around an internal and an external understanding of honour.

  • http://soisilicon.com Ruang

    The game is definitely rigged. I always got better grades and test scores than my sister, but just because she happened to belong to the female demographic, she always got into better schools.
    Thanks for the great post! Love the personal anecdote.

  • http://soisilicon.com Ruang

    The game is definitely rigged. I always got better grades and test scores than my sister, but just because she happened to belong to the female demographic, she always got into better schools.
    Thanks for the great post! Love the personal anecdote.

  • sdfsdf sdfsdf

    More cursing to make your point please

  • sdfsdf sdfsdf

    More cursing to make your point please

  • http://profile.typepad.com/larrylong Larry Long

    Very nice. It’s nice to be reminded that I’m on the right path. Thanks.

  • http://profile.typepad.com/larrylong Larry Long

    Very nice. It’s nice to be reminded that I’m on the right path. Thanks.

  • Sean

    Shut the fuck up and go away if you don’t like cursing, please.

  • Sean

    Shut the fuck up and go away if you don’t like cursing, please.

  • http://techatnyu.com Trevor

    Nice post Matt, couldn’t agree more. Good way to put into words something I’ve been thinking for a while.

  • http://techatnyu.com Trevor

    Nice post Matt, couldn’t agree more. Good way to put into words something I’ve been thinking for a while.

  • http://www.theascendancegroup.org Jonathan Hilley

    100% agreed. We all tend to make relative comparisons – this explains why the guy with $10MM feels poor hanging out with friends worth $100MM. Instead, if we look at our lives absolutely and judge based on our own personal benchmarks, we can live much more fulfilling lives.
    P.S. In a similar vein, there was a great story posted to HN today: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/austria/7190750/Millionaire-gives-away-fortune-which-made-him-miserable.html.
    Keep up the good work.

  • http://www.theascendancegroup.org Jonathan Hilley

    100% agreed. We all tend to make relative comparisons – this explains why the guy with $10MM feels poor hanging out with friends worth $100MM. Instead, if we look at our lives absolutely and judge based on our own personal benchmarks, we can live much more fulfilling lives.
    P.S. In a similar vein, there was a great story posted to HN today: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/austria/7190750/Millionaire-gives-away-fortune-which-made-him-miserable.html.
    Keep up the good work.

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