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Aanchal Mahajan's avatar

This really hit me, but I think there’s a deeper truth here.

You convince an employee to stick around, to pass up that MBA because you sold them the vision. And they trust you. You look an early investor in the eye, the one who put their money on the line when no one else would, and you promise them a return. They bet on you, not just the idea, when everything was still uncertain. That’s a huge responsibility.

So, when things get messy, when growth plateaus, when sales slow down or crises hit, it’s not just about you anymore—it’s about fulfilling those promises. And that pressure can make you hard. It can make you impatient, demanding, even ruthless at times. Not because you want to be, but because you feel like you have to be. You don’t want to let down the people who believed in you.

It’s not easy. There’s no manual for this, and honestly, I don’t think there’s a founder out there who hasn’t felt torn between staying the dreamer and becoming the person who has to take on the tough decisions, often without explanations. You start to prioritize survival over everything else—getting through the day, the week, the year—and that can make you seem distant, difficult, or just plain harsh.

I think it's the emotional toll of trying to keep it all together. It’s because we feel the weight of everything we’ve built, and the promises we’ve made to the people who got us here. The real challenge is finding a way to get through that pressure without completely losing yourself. At the end of the day, it’s about survival—for the business, for the people who trusted you, and for your own sanity. And in that fight, sometimes the lines get blurred!

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Sanchit Garg's avatar

what a fabulous articulation !

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