There is a kind of entrepreneurship that says, start the company, see which sectors are hot and booming, and when you reach a certain stage after n rounds of funding, sell it off and add a few more zeroes to your personal bank balance. That’s one kind of entrepreneurship. It makes no real change to who you are. In your own style, in your own primitive way, you have just sung another song—run-of-the-mill, nothing fresh about it, nothing even melodious about it.
And then there is another entrepreneurship that is an expression of the best within you, that is an expression of your seeking, of your longing for the best. Such an entrepreneurship is not an act in ambition; it is rather a love affair.