Startup families: You’re not perfect

September 24, 2015  |  Startland News Staff

Irey and Asher Kohrs

I’m not perfect. At being a father or running a startup.

Jon Kohrs

Jon Kohrs

I’m 33 with two kids ages 7 and 5. I remember when they were younger. I would work until 3 a.m. on something I thought was extremely valuable at the time. My daughter would wake me up at 7 a.m., tugging on the sheets, “Daddy, get up.” Scrambling out the door, many times with their clothes on backwards, I’d throw some cereal in a red plastic cup with milk and a spoon for them to scarf down in the car.

Every morning was near chaos, only to arrive at school five minutes late, my two kids crying in the backseat, “Daddy, we can’t be late again!” Getting back in the car, I’d breathe, relieved to have survived the morning. But totally depressed and guilty for missing another moment in their lives. Rinse and repeat each morning and you have my children’s childhood.

We are all procreators. We strive to create things that outlive us and to scale ourselves. As parents and entrepreneurs, we have a double bottom line. How do we scale a business to make money? And how do we scale ourselves through our kids?

I remember one Christmas Santa brought our kids one of those building sets with a million small tiny pieces. Sometimes I think people like to torture us by giving gifts that stay embedded in every piece of furniture and tuft of carpet for eternity.

The kids fought over the pieces as they tried to create this replica elementary school building that was well beyond the age of difficulty. At every turn, my son would smash what my daughter built. Then my daughter would retaliate, stealing a piece from her brother. Tears ensued. Then timeout. And then the pieces would be packed up, only to be brought out days later, still half built with pieces missing.

Thinking back, this present was a perfect metaphor for our bottom line as fathers and entrepreneurs. We constantly switch our attention between the building blocks important to our children’s lives and to our livelihood — often leaving both half built.

Building a startup is hard. Building a startup and a family is even harder.

So, what’s my advice to you? Sadly, if there was an easy answer, we’d all have successful startups and families nestled in perfect houses with white picket fences.

If you’re a startup parent, go give your kids a hug today. If you know a startup dad or mom, go give him or her a hug. And give the advice a good friend once told me. You’re not perfect. You’ll never be. And it’s OK.

Stop building all the time, put the pieces down and enjoy the moment once in a while. Your kids and co-founders will remember that moment far more than the building you’re trying to erect.

Jon Kohrs works in user experience design in public policy and infrastructure sectors. Once a band geek, twice a father and forever a Wildcat, Kohrs was farm-raised in rural Kansas and is now rooted in Kansas City.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2015 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Mike Sobek, medZERO

        Launch Health check-up: medZERO simplifies medical bill pay with zero interest, zero fees

        By Tommy Felts | November 13, 2019

        Editor’s note: The following is part of a series of stories on the six cohort companies of the Launch Health Accelerator, powered by Nueterra Capital and sponsored by LaunchKC. Click here to read all the stories published in this series. Paying medical bills should be as simple as making a car payment, said Mike Sobek.  “We…

        Rajesh Nair and Mani Raman, Yotabites

        KC boutique big data startup Yotabites planned its big exit for 2025 — a buyer came five years early

        By Tommy Felts | November 9, 2019

        Starting with a laser-focus on attacking big data’s fundamental problems, Lenexa-based Yotabites is announcing its acquisition from Oregon-based ProKarma, said Rajesh Nair, noting the sale fell many years ahead of schedule for the forward-thinking startup. “It really started out as a combination of things for us: from [seeing a lack of] creativity in the big…

        Blade & Timber, Lawrence

        Mass Street fire leaves future uncertain for Blade & Timber’s Lawrence store

        By Tommy Felts | November 9, 2019

        An early morning fire at Blade & Timber’s Massachusetts Street location in Lawrence has left the premier axe-throwing startup waiting for answers, said Matt Baysinger. “While it’s a surreal experience to learn that your business is on fire and that there’s nothing you can do about it, I’m incredibly grateful that nobody was in the…

        Roy Scott, Healthy Hip Hop

        Two Kansas City startups relocating to St. Louis to cash $50K Arch Grants awards

        By Tommy Felts | November 8, 2019

        Two Kansas City tech startups are on the move — winning spots in the Arch Grants competition, an “aggressive effort” to build St. Louis’ startup ecosystem. Healthy Hip Hop and FastDemocracy were among 20 companies each earning $50,000 in equity-free cash grants through the selection, which also requires the startups run their businesses from St.…