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

        Reggie Gray, Black Privilege, KCSourceLink video

        WATCH: Faces of KC entrepreneurship find strength in numbers, community resources

        By Tommy Felts | April 5, 2019

        A new video from KCSourceLink highlights the faces of Kansas City entrepreneurship — featuring makers, innovators, tech founders and social entrepreneurs — and their connection to the resource network and ecosystem infrastructure in Kansas City. “It takes very special people to be able to put everything on the line,” says Reggie Gray, executive director of Black…

        Brendan Reilly, Dan Scott and Richard Neal, Lelex Prime

        Time to see green: 3 startups spring into Digital Sandbox KC proof-of-concept program

        By Tommy Felts | April 4, 2019

        The path from concept to commercialization has three reinvigorated travelers this spring, Jeff Shackelford said Thursday, announcing the latest early-stage entrepreneurs to join Digital Sandbox KC. The program’s newly joined startups include a tech-driven legal solution and two companies using artificial intelligence to innovate their industries, said Shackelford, executive director of Digital Sandbox KC. “As…

        Zenernet defying the status quo, taking on industry giants with OP-fueled solar startup

        By Tommy Felts | April 3, 2019

        Overland Park-based Zenernet is soaking in renewed interest in solar, powering its push to become an industry player on the national stage, said JP Gerken. “The growth potential [for solar] is endless,” said Gerken, founder of solar power service provider Zenernet. “I think we’ve barely scratched the surface on what the potential is with residential…

        Wesley Hamilton, Crossfit partner on gym space flexing adaptive athletes alongside able-bodied peers

        By Tommy Felts | April 3, 2019

        A first-of-its-kind, all-inclusive gym is emerging to reshape what fitness feels like for adaptive athletes, said Wesley Hamilton. “This vision of what we’re about to create here at Crossfit Memorial Hill is magnificent,” said Hamilton, founder and executive director of Kansas City-based nonprofit the Disabled But Not Really Foundation (DBNR), which partnered with the local…