Callie England opens up on why she stepped down from Rawxies

July 12, 2017  |  Callie England

Editor’s note: The following piece by Callie England sheds light on why she stepped down as CEO of the vegan snack company Rawxies. It contains explicit language. [divide margin_top=”1″ margin_bottom=”1″]

The other day I found myself frozen in panic; what the fuck just happened!?

And when I say “just happened” I’m referring to the past six years: From the moment I trademarked Rawxies, to the moment I stepped down, and to the moment I pursued another path … What. The fuck. Just happened.

Yup, just like that.

A sobering moment where my life flashed before me. Slow and blissful, yet, fast and painful.

Rewind

I’m 27, naive, passionate and driven. I had a bachelor’s degree in fine art, no formal business training, and zero experience in food manufacturing. I was fearless to the fullest extent.

I packed a U-Haul and I moved 2,000 miles away from my friends and family. I rented a corner of a tea kitchen and I just went for it. In the first year, I rolled and cut by hand over 100,000 cookies, I knocked on over 100 doors and I averaged four hours of sleep each night.

What an 8 – 5 employee works in 3.5 years, I worked in one.

Repeat that for six years.

Complete oblivion

I lived so fast, so focused, and so determined that I eventually went numb. I trained my brain to stop feeling because the rollercoaster of emotions was just too much. I shut it off.

I went from innovator and creator to HR and finance. A soul-crushing haze.

Eventually, I began to crumble. I built a brand, but I did it at the cost of, well, everything: Relationships, family, hobbies and health.

I stopped feeling in the pursuit of success.

Investors, employees, product manufacturing — the hole was so fucking deep and I was so alone. I got sick of explaining to people the reality of entrepreneurialism, so I just I just isolated myself further.

Everyone thought I was so alive. When all I wanted every night, was to go to bed and never wake up. I wish I were kidding.

I was done playing pretend.

Fast forward

Six months later, I’ve begun to feel again. Not only experiencing joy in the present moment — from getting dressed to cooking dinner — but also in acknowledging those once-in-a-lifetime moments that I never actually lived. National awards, major blog features, and large publication call outs.

Out of body experiences. Present; 1-6 years later.

I didn’t give up

Had I done that, I would have continued to selflessly pursue a position I was too burnt out to fulfill. I stepped down because I loved my employees. I had a responsibility to my investors. And I needed to honor my own well-being.

In a black and white world, I found peace in a murky shade of gray.

Tagged ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder
      [adinserter block="4"]

      2017 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Unplugged: 9 days in the wilderness taught me boundaries

        By Tommy Felts | July 26, 2016

        The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. Hello, my name is Larissa Uredi, and I have a genetic predisposition to workaholism. When I was a kid, my dad wasn’t home much. Growing his construction company demanded long hours in the office and most of his focus. It was his greatest passion and…

        Jon Kohrs unpacks the cultural traffic jam in ‘corporate startups,’ intrapreneurship

        By Tommy Felts | July 25, 2016

        Editor’s note: Jon Kohrs is the leader of two corporate startup teams, driving innovation and intrapreneurship at Damascus Edge. The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. There are several established Kansas City companies “going startup.” Faced with startup competitors disrupting their industries, they’ve had to ask themselves how to remix the power of…

        What do 1 Million Cups presenters reveal about KC’s entrepreneurial community?

        By Tommy Felts | July 22, 2016

        Editor’s note: Opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone.  Every Wednesday morning in Kansas City and 91 other cities nationwide, one or two early-stage startups present a six-minute profile of their companies to a diverse audience, followed by 20 minutes of open Q&A. I recently reviewed 51 presentations delivered at 1 Million Cups…

        Investor John Fein offers 8 tips to hook a VC

        By Tommy Felts | July 21, 2016

        Editor’s Note: John Fein recently announced his departure from Techstars to lead a new $7 million venture fund. The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. For the past three Techstars programs in Kansas City, the most important aspect of my job as managing director has been deciding which companies to invite into…