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Should You Start a Company? The Honest Truth

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We were constantly like, "Salesforce is

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going to crush us tomorrow. Did you see

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their announcement? We're dead." We said

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that

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>> [laughter]

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>> so many times.

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I'm excited to be on your show.

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It's kind of our show, Brian. That's

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true.

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Do you consider yourself retired?

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I don't think I'll ever retire. But

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you're not the CEO of a company. No.

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I have a whole bunch of interesting

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stuff going on. Are you happier in this

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phase of your life than when you were

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running a 20 or 30 billion-dollar

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company? Or how about happier compared

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to when you were running a 10

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million-dollar company? Where where is

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like your levels of happiness been cuz

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you've founded a company that is now

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has, I don't know, five, six, 7,000

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employees, billions in revenue. Now

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[snorts] you're retired and you're not

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retired, but you're not running a

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company and you're a little bit of a

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a VC and advisor.

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So, tell me about your happiness levels

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between each one. Okay, I'm going to

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give you like the grading system in my

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head of for number employees. Like two

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to 10 employees, I was like a C. I

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didn't really I had

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I could write code, but no one wanted

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it. Like I did You don't add a lot of

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value at that phase. 10 to 100, I was

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like an A. I felt like I knew what I was

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doing. I had been in, you know,

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scale-ups before. 100 to 1,000, you

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know, maybe A minus. Like I kind of felt

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like I knew what I was doing.

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1,000 to 10,000,

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I didn't enjoy the the secret of life is

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enjoying the passage of time. I wasn't

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really enjoying the passage of time. It

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was a lot of

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I was just working on a lot of stuff I

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wasn't that interested in. So,

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yeah. So, it depended on where I was in

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the in the history of HubSpot. Like I I

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had sort of CEO market fit between 10

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and 1,000. That's like your your you're

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putting 100 to 1,000 in the same

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category. That's kind of astounding to

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me. That doesn't seem like those should

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be in the same category. So, you enjoyed

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that whole range equally. Yeah, I worked

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when I my first job out of school,

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I was the first BDR at a company called

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PTC. It's a CAD software company. And I

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joined it was like 3 million in revenue.

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And when I left it was, you know,

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billions in revenue. So, I sort of saw

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that journey and I was part of that

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machine.

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And so, you know, I took a lot of that

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and brought it with me into HubSpot. And

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I just felt like I knew what I was doing

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in there and I was working on things I

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really enjoyed. There's a lot of changes

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between 100 and 1,000. I just sort of

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remember being quite motivated and happy

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with my day-to-day in there. Very little

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worry in that phase about what the nom

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and gov committee of the board thought.

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Very little interaction with our

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compliance and legal folks, things like

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that.

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>> [snorts]

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>> Um mostly just working on

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you know, are the employees productive

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and happy? Are the customers productive

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and happy? Like really focused on that.

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And I I like that type of work.

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Can you go through Okay, so your

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categories were two to 10, 10 to 100,

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100 to 1,000, and then 1,000 to 10,000.

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What about how hard you are working?

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Like in terms of hours. You know, people

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talk about 996. That was at least that

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for both Dharmesh and I. We were we were

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pedals to the metal the entire time. And

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if we weren't working, we were thinking

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about working. It's not for the faint of

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heart. And

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like if you look at my life, it's kind

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of interesting. Like I'm 58.

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In the years I should have gotten

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married and had a bunch of kids, I had

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HubSpot. I'm still single.

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And yeah, you're kind of married to your

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company and you're all you're full on.

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Like the 996 thing, it's at least that

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for the founders. And I work a lot of

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founders today.

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It's that's a minimum for the founders,

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I would say these days. And and you got

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you guys said something on a tweet that

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I thought was You said it. That I

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thought was kind of interesting. Like

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when you're a founder,

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like 90% of the time stuff's broken and

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you're dealing with problems and things

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kind of suck. I'm angry I'm angry most

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of the time. I'm angry most of the 10%

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of the time it's like, "We got this.

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We got it. Everything's going our way.

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The wind's at our back." But it's pretty

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rare like You live your day looking at

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your Slack and your inbox and your texts

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and it's mostly bad news in there.

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Well, so tell me, once a company gets to

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100 or 1,000 employees or 10,000

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employees, does that emotion go away?

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Same. It's the same ratio. It's still

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mostly a [ __ ] sandwich in your

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inbox.

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Do you feel existential threat? Like my

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business, we have plenty of money and

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very profitable, whatever. But for some

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reason I still feel like an existential

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threat all the time where it's like if

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we don't do this well, we're going out

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of business.

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>> Constantly. We were constantly like,

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"Salesforce is going to crush us

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tomorrow. Did you see their

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announcement? We're dead." We said that

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so [laughter] many times.

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Yeah, we tend to overestimate what our

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competitors do and underestimate what we

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do. Maybe there's a correlation between

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like how like shitty you think you are

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and how good of an entrepreneur you make

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because maybe there's no correlation,

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but there's like a correlation between

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people who start businesses because I

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noticed that I have like I I personally

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have very negative self-talk. Where it's

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like, "You're [ __ ] You're nothing. Uh

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you have to prove them wrong. You are

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horrible. You barely growed. You can't

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do this. You have to put like my and it

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wears people out there because I

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actually think that that's negative

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that's a pretty poor way to motivate

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people. Uh but it motivates me. I'm the

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same and I people say, you know, you

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want to be very positive and positive

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and motivate the people. I tend to be

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paranoid. I still, after all these

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years,

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have imposter syndrome. I'm a little

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nervous talking to you today. Believe it

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or not.

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>> [laughter]

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>> Really? Why? Yeah, I'm not as Given all

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the success I've had, my confidence

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doesn't even remotely

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help me compare to it. And my inner

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monologue is like, "You got so much to

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prove, dude. Don't [ __ ] it up." Does

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Dharmesh feel the same way?

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Yeah, I I can't say for sure, but I I I

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think very much so.

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Do most other So, you run in a circle

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with some of the best entrepreneurs on

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Earth, most successful entrepreneurs on

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Earth. Is that the common thread? Yes.

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Almost all of them.

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I interview all these CEOs and I ask

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them during the interviews, you know,

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"Do you have imposter syndrome?" And

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they hem and they hem and they haw cuz

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they don't want to say they do. They do.

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Almost all of them. Let me ask you one

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more question about all this and then I

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want to know about what you're like more

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of the Sequoia stuff cuz I think that's

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super fascinating.

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Sometimes, I think that with being an

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entrepreneur, the hard part I would

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think about this a lot and I've talked

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about it a lot, which is the hard part

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emotionally isn't the risk-taking. The

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risk-taking is actually not that

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challenging because in a lot of cases

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the risk is not that big and you could

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like

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like even if you go big, you can kind of

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