I turned 45 yesterday.
Iāve always said that I would live until I am 90, so hopefully this is the halfway point.
Iāve had a fortunate half-life.
I have a great, supportive, loving family and hundreds of kind friends around the world.
Iāve already had quite an incredible professional career that I feel lucky and thankful for. In my 20ās I hustled my way to an intense position in the Clinton White House and I experienced and grew so much at an early age. In my 30ās and 40ās I had some success in business, and also some high-profile setbacks. Iām the type of person who bounces right back after taking a punch, and Iām still at it.
Itās been a thrilling, rewarding journey.
As I get older I try to become a better person, a better friend, a better colleague, a better mentor, a better pupil. Itās a continuous process, a perpetual beta. I take more risks than most people, which means more mistakes, and thereās always room for improvement.
20 years ago the one word others would most use to describe me was: indefatigable.
15 years ago: ambitious.
10 years ago: intense.
8 years ago: confident.
5 years ago: fast.
At 45, Iām still all of those things, but Iāve also embraced a new tool in my toolkit.
Last week, a venture capitalist made a point of telling me at the conclusion of our meeting: āyouāre a lot more āhumbleā than I expected.ā
Today: Humbleāāāa very different word than the ones above.
Thatās on purpose. Iāve been working on that. I have come to learn and appreciate that humility is one of the most valuable traits for any person, and especially for a leader. Iāve come to appreciate that itās normal to have flaws, that weāre all growth projects, and that you gain more energy through supporting others than you can ever force all on your own. Iāve come to understand that you can take more and better risks when you embrace what you donāt know vs. when you convince yourself that you know everything from the start. Youāre never too old or too wise to ask for advice. Youāre never too old to learnāāāand you learn more from listening than by talking. You deserve most of the blame for your setbacks and failures, and only some of the credit for your successes.
My overarching philosophy on life has changed a lot the past couple of years. I used to always be going places, always looking around the next corner. Now, I live in the moment and focus on the here and now. I used to scowl a lot. Now, Iām all smiles. I used to demand. Now, I try to coach, and I let myself be coached. I used to have a short temper and little tolerance for avoidable mistakes. Now, I let a lot go, knowing that most everything is fixable, and if not, it becomes a teaching moment on our collective journey. While Iāve always been in a hurry, Iāve become more patient. I used to believe that being fast and achieving results was an excuse for not being nice, and that weād make-nice during the post mortem. Now, I live for the journey.
Iād like to think Iāve calmed and gained perspective.
From 1998 to 2014 I moved cities 10 times and lived in more than 15 homes. Today I canāt imagine moving anywhere; Chris and I have found home in Berlin and I attribute a lot of my happiness there to it being the least pretentious and the most just-be-yourself place in the world.
Above all, at age 45, I can say with confidence that I know myself today more than ever. Iām comfortable and self-aware with myself and who I am, what Iām good at and where I have flaws.
The addition of humility makes me feel stronger and more capable than ever.
Why am I sharing all this?
Partly because most people donātāāāespecially not tech entrepreneurs. I was quoted recently saying that ātech doesnāt need to be so douchey.ā I truly believe that, and I have definitely contributed my share of douchey moments in the past.
Partly because we have a President in the White House who is perhaps the least humble person on earth. The world could use some embracing of humility right now.
And, largely because I wish I could have had this chat with my younger self long ago. You can be all those things that make a strong entrepreneur: indefatigable, ambitious, intense, confident and fast, but until you are humble about it and self-aware, youāre not playing with a full deck. Sure, there are some high profile examples of successful entrepreneurs who seem to lack the empathy gene but donāt model yourself off of them: model yourself off the most gracious you that you can be. This may sound counterintuitive but itās true: A humble leader is a more confident leaderāāāas you are more aware of who you are and what you do.
p.s. Iām well aware that writing about being humble can be perceived as not-humble. I humbly ask for your understanding.