This obviously isn't a solution that'll work for everyone, but if you had just a year early in life to spend on a car dealership selling cars it'd be an amazing experience for learning. Now when I hear a no, or experience failure it just doesn't even phase me, I've already heard no tens of thousands of times. I'm sure there are other types of sales where this could be learned, but if you want to be a founder I sure think there'd be a huge amount of benefit gained from a car sales type experience.
Could not agree more with this line - you have to be able to take the mercuric ups and downs.
"Entrepreneurs take note: The going rate for a 'yes' to your ideas is roughly ten 'no's. - @neilpatel"
https://twitter.com/johnsonwhitney/status/268411928408363009
"As a techie individual contributor in a larger company, I could go to work everyday and execute 99% predictably. As a founder, I had to find ways to plead your case over and over — to employees, investors, candidates, advertisers, users — and I got rejected a lot. For an introvert, the amount of pleading and subsequent rejection came as quite a shock."
That's probably one of the most difficult adjustments I've had to make moving from 16 years of plain-old-coding into being a founder.
When I run I have a constant inner monologue of "don't stop, don't stop, don't stop" for 45 min.
It never seems to get easier, but I know that I ran successfully yesterday, and the day before, and the day before ... hence, I should be able to do it again today.
Then, there are also the physical / health benefits.
For those who don't know what I'm talking about: http://rejectiontherapy.com and the hardcore 30 day rejection therapy challenge: http://rejectiontherapy.com/rules/