by cbtacy on 3/14/23, 5:30 PM with 15 comments
by O__________O on 3/14/23, 9:25 PM
On same note, having seen similar YC batch and alumni situations play out on HN before, I hope it’s obvious that YC is neither qualified to sort out mental health challenges founders face, nor should they attempt to do so in my opinion. YC to my knowledge doesn’t place limits on the use of its investments in founders —and if a founder felt they needed to step back, pause, or use a fraction of the funds to get professional help, I would be very surprised if the group partners were not supportive of that. Further, given the sensitivity of the topic, I personally don’t feel YC officially commenting would help anyone, and very possible might even be a breach of law depending of the specifics of the situation.
For anyone passionate about startups, as former YC founder & former YC partner Daniel Gross said in a startup school presentation, your health is critical to winning at startups:
https://youtube.com/watch?v=LH1bewTg-P4
For anyone curious about Agora, their Wefunder page has a lot of information:
by Lionga on 3/14/23, 5:36 PM
Telling people about the true nature (bad for health, family, relationships) of a VC Startup? Hell no.
by CharlesW on 3/14/23, 8:44 PM
by alaskamiller on 3/15/23, 6:57 PM
I read this and heard this. The thing I can say is that looking at startup culture now, after twenty years of being here, it's just getting weirder and weirder.
It takes time sometimes to look at something and see it for it was rather what it could have been.
I, too, took $200,000 four years ago. I turned that into employing 40 people, two retail locations, and 100 hr work weeks, and it all disappeared with the pandemic shutdowns. I, too, did odd jobs, have failing mental health, struggled, dealt with others didn't understand, insisted, persisted, etc. If there was just one more thing to be done. Other days, I couldn't do a single thing.
I've also gone through experiences of trying to raise money to get the agency I worked with the funds to kick off a project and watching that fail in multiple hilarious ways.
If this experience was what it takes to handle your health do it. Your oxygen mask on first, always, before others. If you're looking for something to excuse your behavior, find it, accept it, and forgive yourself. Write out what you learned, and and keep trying.
by gopalv on 3/14/23, 9:10 PM
That seems an unnecessary take-down of the founder in the middle.
The "recipe for success" isn't a thing in you - the "recipe for success" is trying.
And that she did, as much as she could. If this was a success story everything about being a barista would be said in the same admiring tones as the famous Vegas Fedex story.
"You can't win the lottery without buying a ticket" is how I view silicon valley money, because you can win, but you have to put yours in to win it.
by redbell on 3/14/23, 9:44 PM
Anyway, although I'm not familiar with "Agora", I wish the best of luck to its founder(s) and the rest of the team who were affected by the shutdown.
by JohnMakin on 3/15/23, 10:30 PM
No job or project is worth your mental or physical well being.
by trallnag on 3/16/23, 4:38 PM