A technical entrepreneur who spent four years, billionaire Elon Musk recently shared his attainment on LinkedIn, sparking mixed reactions online. The founder of AI Startup, Pranjal ji, Pranjal ji said that focusing on billionaires will not really help anyone to be productive. “You will not succeed by seeing Elon Musk,” he wrote, while sharing his experience of being caught in a cycle of praise. Mr. Pranjal revealed that he had been following Elon Musk for four years.
“The embarrassing truth of my passion: 2 Teslas was bought in 18 months, 17 biographies and books consumed, 200+ hours of podcast interview (and) Tesla Stock broke me,” Sri Pranjal wrote, re -starting his 4 -year passion with the world’s richest man.
However, technology said that despite his deep dives in Musk’s world, his own ambitions remained stable.
He said, “What did I finally realize after 4 years of Fanboy Pooja: When I was studying his life, I was not building myself. While I tracked his tweets, my own projects collected dust. While I defended him online, I remained stable in my skills,” he said.
Mr. Pranjal admitted that the time he put and energy in putting a billionaire into idols, in fact, stopped him from making meaningful progress in his own efforts. He shared the “cruel reality” to the billionaires about the idols. Technical wrote, “His ‘morning rhutins’ is not that he did not succeed. His ‘MindSet Tips’ came after his money, not before that. His ‘Work Ethi’ was capable of family money. His ‘Genius Inss’ came from the teams that he hired.”
“The actual cost of my passion was not financial. This opportunity was the cost. Artists of the aristocratic class are not studying other artists. They are very busy. I have since redirected that energy to my own undertakings and doubled their income in 18 months. Stop looking at billionaires. Start building his own runway,” He concluded his post.
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Social media users were in a hurry to react to Shri Pranjal’s insight. While some praised him for character growth and realized the error of his methods, others made fun of him for his “unhealthy” passion.
One user wrote, “All passionately passosal passions are individual-toxic and harmful to people. It is good on you to break free,” a user wrote. “A very good post. When someone tries to mimic the footsteps, they follow a tendency. Those who really succeed are the hashtag#trendsetters. Make your own way,” said another.
However, a user jokingly wrote, “Wait, you are telling me that having a bootik/sim for a billionaire is not the way for success and money?”
“People who worship famous and/or rich people surprise me. They do a nonsense just like you and I do, people …” a third user wrote. “Who thinks on this whole earth that it is good for them to make anyone idols?” One more asked.