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If you don’t want to grind, don’t pick a career where only the toughest survive—like startups. In China, programmers get massages. You could be giving the massages.

I’m not smart, but I worked 7 days a week for a decade. It takes me 40 hours just to warm up, so real work means 100-hour weeks. Yet I’ve built 3 startups, 2 unicorns. In both, I was the dumbest person in the room—but I outworked everyone.



My brother, if you are taking 40 hours to get to the state where you're warmed up, maybe look into that first.


It's hard. The problem is I'm not a natural builder. I have a really hard time getting into the critical state. The ability to go carefully inch by inch through the code. Test and Doc driven development helps with my temperament a bunch. Mostly I had to just rely on hard work.


Being a founder is a completely different situation which the article is explicitly not talking about.

Although, frankly, even as a founder, 100-hour 7-day weeks aren’t right for the vast majority of people. Clearly it worked for you, which is great, but 99% of people do not have that level of energy, and furthermore are mentally unable to withstand the sacrifices such a schedule imposes on other aspects of life.


perhaps 99% of people shouldn't start multibillion dollar tech companies




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