I wonder how many close friends does a startup cost too?
I am guessing If you are a founder, your time for social life will be very very limited, and a startup will cost 2 or more close friends.
One thing I found out, is that in general (for guys at least) is very easy to catch up and reconnect even after a long period of time of disconnect, as long as they are in the same stage lifes (eg. both being single, or not having kids, or both having a domestic life and kids, etc.). The disconnect becomes more permament when one enters a completely different stage of the life (having kids, will the major one), than the other friend.
I think this is one of the biggest perks of YC: I have more friends because I did it, not fewer. I met some of my closest friends there (and even got introduced to my girlfriend through one of them).
Even without something like YC it gives you to opportunity to connect with others doing startups, as long as your city has a startup/ coworking ecosystem. Probably met more people and had way more interesting conversations since getting involved.
When I went to orientation when I entered college, they were very explicit not to start intimate relationships until a month or two in (after the first chem test). One reason was we would find out how hard college really was and could judge whether we could afford that commitment, but another reason they gave was that you wouldn't develop friendships with other people nearly as much, and you needed that broader support group to help you in college. Plus heaven forbid you break up, and find yourself with no social circle at all.
Of course, the fun part is when you break up after a long relationship where your social circles are very mixed. You run the risk of losing all your friends. Which sucks.
I had a relationship in which I attempted to maintain separate social circles as much as possible for this very reason - we had overlapping friends, but I encouraged her to keep a separate group of "her friends" with whom I would not go hang out, mostly girls. She'd invite me frequently, and this became a major bone of contention... This was a contributing factor to the downfall of that relationship.
On the upside, I didn't lose any friends. On the downside, she lost many.
In general, hedging against the failure of X is not the best way to successfully achieve X, if X is something within your control.
Extreme example: when the Spanish conquistadors landed in the Americas, they immediately burned their ships, so they would have no way of escaping back home to Spain in case things didn't work out. They would either conquer an empire or die.
Obviously, there are situations where burning your ships isn't warranted. But frankly, gambling on the success of the relationship is not the best way to keep your friends, either. It's a tradeoff.
Sometimes in life you have to burn your ships. I hope everyone finds someone worth burning their ships for.
Even if I hadn't read that, it wouldn't make sense. Ships of any era represent large capital expenditures. No navy would give up a ship unless it's unusable or can't be defended; worst case, they'd sail home empty with a skeleton crew.
I checked Wikipedia. Evidently, Cortez had gotten in trouble with the governor of Cuba, Then:
"Those of his men still loyal to the Governor of Cuba conspired to seize a ship and escape to Cuba, but Cortés moved swiftly to quash their plans. To make sure such a mutiny did not happen again, he decided to scuttle his ships, on the pretext that they were no longer seaworthy. There is a popular misconception that Cortés burned the ships to prevent further mutiny, instead Cortés scuttled all but at least one, which were simply ran aground. This misconception has been attributed to the reference made by Cervantes de Salazar in 1546 as to Cortés burning his ships.[7] This may have also come from a mistranslation of the version of the story written in Latin.[8]
With all of his ships scuttled except for one small ship with which to communicate with Spain, Cortés effectively stranded the expedition in the so-called New World and ended all thoughts of loyalty to the Governor of Cuba. Cortés then led his band inland towards the fabled Tenochtitlan."
Cortes' burning of the ships was to make discipline among his men a non-issue, not the discipline of his own mind. Your point remains untainted by the imperfection of your analogy.
As you say, gambling on relationship success may cost friends; I chose my friends and believe I am happier for it.
Not if you're the most awesome friend they have though... So if your friend starts falling in love, step up your friend game ASAP. Getting in good w/ the new significant other is probably also a good move.
This is a classic case of statistics being useless. Are we actually supposed to avoid falling in love because of this negative effect?
It's like knowing that 50% of marriages end up in divorce. True, and damn irrelevant when trying to decide if you should propose or not. Individual marriages have either a 100% or 0% chance of success, and calculating the probability of those outcomes is not greatly informed by the "national average."
It's like knowing that 50% of marriages end up in divorce. True, and damn irrelevant when trying to decide if you should propose or not. Individual marriages have either a 100% or 0% chance of success, and calculating the probability of those outcomes is not greatly informed by the "national average."
Not true at all.
The subjective probability (which is all you have to make a decision from) is reflected by incomplete information, but is never 100%.
But even the objective probability (as far as such a concept is even coherent) isn't either 0 or 100. It's somewhere in between. Maybe under one set of circumstances the marriage will work out perfectly, but under another set of circumstances it won't. That's random. In one possible world the husband could arrive home at 5:12 and find his wife with another man, in another possible world he arrives home at 5:17 to find his wife freshly showered. That's random, or at least stochastic enough. In one possible world a stray gamma ray gives their child leukemia and the couple grow closer by going through the experience together, in another possible world no such thing happens, the husband goes back to work shortly after the child is born and slowly becomes alienated from his wife until divorce happens. Think you have a good enough marriage that adultery or alienation aren't going to become problems? Well throw in the multitude of circumstances which can cause people to change over time, and you'll find random factors there, too.
I think it's might be somewhat relevant, consider this theory: it reminds reasonable person that there is a possibility of divorce, and given the high cost of divorce for at least of one parties, people might become more cautious in proposing or accepting. Ironically, potentially reducing future divorce rate by doing so. In other words, knowing this statistics may tilt people into more cautions behavior.
I call bullshit. The very definition of close friends is that they are close, whether you spend less time with them or not. I've got friends across the country and we're very close even though we meet a only few times a year.
I am guessing If you are a founder, your time for social life will be very very limited, and a startup will cost 2 or more close friends.
One thing I found out, is that in general (for guys at least) is very easy to catch up and reconnect even after a long period of time of disconnect, as long as they are in the same stage lifes (eg. both being single, or not having kids, or both having a domestic life and kids, etc.). The disconnect becomes more permament when one enters a completely different stage of the life (having kids, will the major one), than the other friend.