Pain Portfolio

note/develop🍃


NASA deliberately selected astronauts who had experienced significant failures and bounced back from them, rather than those with unblemished success records. Similarly, GE's Jack Welch chose executives based on their "runway" for growth, and ballet teacher Marina Semyonova preferred students energized by criticism. They all recognized that fixed ability matters less than mindset and resilience. As Naval Ravikant observed, "your real resume is just a catalog of all your suffering." The most meaningful parts of our lives often emerge from our hardest moments—these challenges become our stories, our wisdom, and ultimately our legacy. It's not the achievements themselves but how we respond when punched in the face that reveals our character and potential.

The interesting things about your life come from your portfolio of pain. The suffering or sacrifices are what you remember. They become engrained in your hero's journey. The hard things you've overcome are what you are most proud of. They're what people relate to. Humility is a by-product of having a large portfolio. Stories and parables are born out of a collection of painful moments. Naval has said "your real resume is just a catalog of all your suffering." These are more than the achievement — as Mike Tyson would say, "everyone has a plan till they get punched in the face." The hard things give us meaning. These things in the portfolio of pain can also be viewed as moments of truth or periods of wisdom.