tomato
@tomatoxyz
The hardest thing seems to be to build something and find the end result doesn't actually work. You can personally realize and admit to failure and ask hard questions of others who are unable to answer them... One of the reasons I got into web3 and DAOs was because of transparency and accessibility - so many great minds get swallowed up by the tech industry and work in silence. Being able to openly talk about failure is valuable but it seems that few people want to embrace it and have kept that mindset from the start which means never being able to meaningfully pause, take stock of things and change course so as to avoid complete failure in the first place. The biggest decision is whether to tell the story of failure so the world can learn from the experience or to walk away for your own sake... If you can tell a story of failure it means you give back value to the world and provide a free guide on how someone else might avoid failure.
1 reply
0 recast
0 reaction
Rodrigo Bardin
@rodrigobardin
💯 interestingly enough, as I chose to actually talk about it when resetting my life some years ago, this helped me get hired as some people saw the value in it: https://rodrigobardin.xyz/bad-portfolio/index.html
0 reply
0 recast
1 reaction