ended up alone, isolated, exempted from society, considered as "crazy"
everyone i knew before disappeared or is like super-busy with school/work
i feel like the only free person in enslaved world
i don't have to go school or college, i learn everything myself
i don't have to work to be able to afford anything
but you see folks, that's where the most people are, most of the time
that's not where i am
how do they learn more about me?
at this point, i'm considering putting a online ad
but i'm really worried it would look too needy and just scare everyone away
how do you, fellow entrepreneurs deal with loneliness?
how do you meet new people when nobody, especially your age, could relate to you?
thank you very much, i appreciate each and every of your feedback
It gets lonely because if you are in service business you start losing faith and trust in people. People lie on resumes, lie about their abilities, clients don't pay, clients lie on what was promised, people quit because they got 5k more somewhere.
My perspective about people changed significantly after having worked with and for people in the last 10 years. However, you build up resilience to a point where nothing can surprise you. You know exactly how to get the outcomes you want from every conversation. You get good at identifying good people and you get good at making money.
Yet, it is lonely. Yes, it is lonely. But it is all worth it.
Most of the world is enslaved because thats the only way you can make them productive.
But there's a small subset of the population who have freed themselves from the burden of work, and we are the creative industrious. If you're as wealthy as you claim you would have come into contact with several of us already.
Who's managing your wealth? Which private clubs are you a member of?
If you're a coder I can give you a cryptographic shibboleth problem, if you solve it, then you are a candidate to join our members only club.
I know several other private clubs, depending on your interests, but again, you should have discovered these already, if you're awake.
By the way, your grammar and writing style is terrible. Fix your capitalisation and harmonize your thoughts so it's not just a steam of consciousness. Effective communication is important - it's NOT trivial and superficial, it's used as signalling!
It's a path that doesn't make a lot of sense unless you've gone down it. So I have a harder time connecting about work to careerist friends. But there are other things to connect on.
It's also lonely because you can't tell staff everything. If you are planning to fire someone, or you actually do, you have a responsibility to keep the reasons to yourself. It feels dishonest every time.
For connection on the topic of work I'm in an entrepreneur's group. We meet about every two months, about 8 of us at each meeting.
What you learn from hearing other people's real problems is that your own shitty problems aren't unique. In fact they're probably the norm.
In this online world sharing knowledge is so much easier. Blogging, Professional forums can be used to share knowledge. It is baby steps but eventually can lead to teaching, workshops which could be fulfilling.
Helping, mentoring budding Entrepreneurs is one area. They would be glad to use all the wisdom.
Spending time with family. Connecting with old friends do help. I found, reaching out just to say hello opens the door.
Also meeting people with similar hobby or interests also helps. People are glad to share their knowledge.
I think when we are stuck, looking at avenues where we can give provides us the opportunity to connect with like minded people.
Also people just don't like to talk about things that they don't find interesting - so if you like to talk exclusively about entrepreneurship with your friends, then it might be boring to them.
If you have made enough money, have you considered starting a non-profit? You seem good at starting new things and a non-profit just might give you the meaning that you are searching for.
Just thinking out loud here.
And a lot of the time, it's because they sort of want to be where you are, but they aren't. A big part of it is their fault. And so they justify it by building a kind of disgust for wealth and the people who hold it. They say, well, being wealthy requires sacrifices to family life, health, and so on, and are happy to see you lonely.
It's also a bit depressing that you can't really "free" anyone. A lot of people seem to think that all they need is money, so they can hire staff and hit financial freedom, but it doesn't work that way.
I'd say the wife and kids keep me rooted somewhere because the relationship is the same. The ideal is Melinda Gates or Sharon Osbourne. The one who straight up will tell you your idea is wrong when you're surrounded by yes-men, now take out the trash. But also support you when you're messed up. And a lot of rockstar kids keep their parents rooted - a two year old will throw a tantrum no matter what, and to paraphrase Liz Tyler, she doesn't know what's different about being a rockstar kid because she never had any other dads. Internet and multiplayer games are nice too because nobody knows who you are.
Spirituality also helps to deal with this. Buddha and Muhammad were already incredibly wealthy. Both found different paths.