This isn’t a full episode, just a pause to acknowledge something that matters to me and to explain why it matters at all.
We recently crossed one-thousand downloads. For the big shows that’s background noise; for me it’s a concrete sign that strangers in thirty-seven countries have decided the ideas here deserve a slice of their day. I started this feed from absolute zero a few months ago. No audience, no archives, no reason to assume anyone would care.
Knowing that hundreds of individuals have already listened feels like permission to keep going and a responsibility to keep the conversation honest. I would like to celebrate by asking—and answering—why we are entrepreneurs, why we start those silly projects, podcasts, blogs, and startups after all.
Most people will never start a company. It’s an observation. Building something from the ground up asks for uncertainty, risk, and years of work before anything tangible shows up. A salary, a clear job description, and a weekend that truly belongs to you are perfectly rational preferences.
Yet a minority of us still choose the other path. Why? For me—and I suspect for many of you—it starts with a form of optimism that is less cheerleading and more refusal. A refusal to accept that what already exists is the upper limit of what can exist. A refusal to see the status quo as fixed. That small act of refusal grained in insatisfaction is where entrepreneurship begins. It comes long before capital, skills, or market timing. Sometimes it survives long after reason says it shouldn’t.
If you recognize that impulse-when you look at a product, a process, or an entire industry and think, “This could be different, and I’m willing to stake my time and resources on that belief”-then you’re already part of the conversation this podcast aims to host, because you made the most important move of any entrepreneur: betting on yourself.
We talk strategy, execution, lessons from builders who came before us, but beneath all of that is the question of posture: do you lean forward into possibility or settle back into certainty? One thousand downloads tells me there are at least a thousand moments when someone chose to lean forward, even if only to listen. a minute. That’s why the number matters. to me at least.
So thank you. Thank you for each commute, workout, or late-night coding session you’ve allowed my voice to accompany
The plan from here is simple: keep recording, keep working on providing much better content. I want to listen to the podcast of the last few months in a year and think that they are bad, ridiculous because the next one will be so much better. If the show helps you move forward or think about your entrepreneur career, then it's doing its job. If you know someone who is wrestling with the decision to build, pass this episode along. If you want to contact me, send an email to the email in the show notes. One thousand is a modest start, and that’s exactly what it should be. Real things grow deliberately. I’m glad you’re here while it’s still small enough that I can picture the listeners individually rather than as a chart.
Let’s see where the future take us.
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