Pranjal G was captivated by Elon Musk. For four years, the founder of the AI startup devoured each word and the movement of the billionaire entrepreneur, convinced that this obsession was the plan to succeed.
Two teslas, countless biographies, hundreds of hours of podcast and investment in disastrous shares later, Pranjal shared a disturbing achievement on Linkedin.
His confessions surprised the followers: “You will not succeed while looking at Elon Musk.” What started as an admiration had become an expensive error, teaching it – and others online – a strong lesson in productivity and personal growth.
“It is not a flex. It is a confession,” wrote Pranjal.
Two brilliant teslas, bought in just 18 months, were supposed to symbolize his progress. Instead, they represented “the most expensive error” of his career. The inventory of Pranjal’s obsession has gone beyond flashy cars: 17 biographies, more than 200 hours of podcast interviews, Tesla risked stock investments and four years of waxed crucial gain.
A photograph marked the turning point. By proudly taking a photo of his second Tesla, Pranjal expected applause. Instead, the blunt message of a mentor struck him hard: “Impressive cars. But what do you build while you are busy buying Elon products?”
The question left Pranjal speechless and forced him to make a painful calculation. “While I was studying Elon’s life, I did not build mine,” he admitted. His own projects were forgotten while he defended Musk online, followed the tweets obsessively and sailed in the shadow of someone else. Its garage housed luxury vehicles, but its wallet was painfully empty.
The cost was amazing. Financially, this meant that $ 192,000 spent in cars, $ 18,000 lost in inappropriate shares and more than $ 140,000 disappeared from missed opportunities for his business. However, the larger damage has gone further: a lost momentum, personal skills in standby and a psychological tension by continuously comparing its start to the established success of Musk.
Pranjal’s truth is frank: billionaire habits do not guarantee your success. Morning routines, motivation advice and legendary work ethics are often products, no causes, wealth. Their famous ideas frequently come from the teams they have hired, and their well supposed failures always conclude conveniently in success.