<i>You have to make a choice: do you want to go to work every day feeling safe and having someone take care of you, or do you want your learning curve to be steeper and higher? It's a lot easier to be in the corporate world.</i><p>No one will <i>ever</i> "take care of you". Depending on what you're doing at any given time, your learning curve can be steeper and higher <i>anywhere</i>. I imagine a Google fellow just might have a steeper learning curve than someone opening a storefront. Why does so much "entrepreneur" advice find a way to insult people with jobs?<p><i>There are some people who get fired from every corporate job they have ever had; those people are the entrepreneurs.</i><p>Or maybe just shitty workers or people with significant issues. BadInCorporateWorld != Entrepreneur<p><i>If there is any other career you can do, you must do it. This is the worst career ever. You make no money, it's high risk...</i><p>That could be said about any career. You should want to do it anyway.<p><i>There was a great article in the Harvard Business Review...</i><p>So we should listen to OP because she read something somewhere. Advice from hard knocks trumps heresay. Where is it?<p><i>Venture capitalists are looking for someone who is somewhat crazy—just on the right side of being a psychopath.</i><p>Citing?<p><i>I can't stress enough how crazy running a venture-backed company is.</i><p>OK, something's fishy here. OP is a blogger. Then why would she need venture capital? Is she confusing "venture" with "angel" or with "friends/family". If so, then why should we listen to her? If not, then why does this article raise more questions than it answers?<p><i>Every 20-year-old will say I want the venture capital, and every 45-year-old will say, "I don't."</i><p>Every?<p>I used to enjoy Inc, but honestly, I could have gotten deeper insight about entrepreneurship from half the people here at hn. Or the local bus stop. Moving along...