The entrepreneur says, "Today, I will make it better; right now, I will make it better".
The entrepreneur makes changes and sees opportunities; they grasp the chance to improve, grow, be better, make the system better, or try something different.
The entrepreneur says to himself, "I will make more money today than I made yesterday, or I will make more change, or I will improve things for those people in a greater way than I did last week".
She says to herself, "I will try as hard as I can today to be better than yesterday, and I will look for places where I can do that and for places where a change can be made to the greatest degree".
They often make money, but often, money is not the point to the entrepreneur; it is just another means of counting the score.
They will start things incessantly and leave projects in the middle to start something else because it's a greater opportunity to make a greater change and more exciting.
Entrepreneurs do not finish things; they begin the change and leave the finishing to someone else.
They leave the finishing to people who solve maths equations or who carefully paint houses or tidy their garages every day to ensure everything is in the right place.
The entrepreneur's garage is never tidy, and they never solve math equations.
The entrepreneur's life is exciting; it is boom and bust.
Often, it is bust and bust before another boom.
But it is exhausting because in the world that the entrepreneur lives, finishing is essential, and unless they have a team of finishers behind them (which takes years to construct), then they are left to finish for themselves, which is the hardest and the most difficult and most unlikely thing that the entrepreneur can do, and therefore they become exhausted.
Careful of what you wish for.
Blog Post Number - 3566
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