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The Humility of Starting Again Without Illusion

I did not start again with optimism.
  • All Blogs
  • FOUNDER JOURNAL
  • The Humility of Starting Again Without Illusion
  • June 10, 2026 by
    Paolo Maria Pavan


    That is the part people often want to edit out. They prefer the cleaner version. The one where a difficult season produces wisdom, wisdom produces clarity, and clarity produces a new beginning with a straight back and a clear horizon. It sounds better. It is easier to sell. It is also not how it felt.

    I recall sitting at a desk with ICA materials open in front of me, reading the same paragraph again and again until the words stopped looking like language. The paper had already softened a little at the corners from being handled too much. There was a yellow highlighter without a cap beside my hand. My jaw was tight. My neck hurt. I was not studying out of passion or ambition. I was studying because I had run out of excuses.

    That moment mattered, underscoring what came next.

    There is a version of starting again that still contains vanity. A founder loses something, then immediately turns recovery into a new performance. New language. New website. New mission. New certainty. New public posture. It looks like movement. Sometimes it even looks like courage. But underneath it, the old illusion is still alive. The illusion that the self can be repaired by appearance. That reinvention is enough. That insight without discipline counts for something.

    So, what I had in front of me then was much smaller and much less flattering.

    A page. A pen. A body still carrying fear. A mind that no longer trusted its own impulses. And the humiliating truth that I would have to learn again, slowly, under my own name, without any guarantee that anyone would care.

    This is where many people misunderstand humility.

    Humility is not thinking poorly of yourself. It is not collapsing into shame. It is not saying, I am nothing. I know that territory well enough to know it solves nothing. Shame makes everything dramatic and useless. It keeps the attention fixed on the self. It asks to be watched while suffering. Real humility is quieter than that.

    Real humility says: I am not entitled to be believed just because I have suffered.

    I am not entitled to trust just because I now speak more carefully.

    I am not entitled to a second chapter just because the first one hurt.

    I must become legible again through conduct.

    That is a colder truth, but a healthier one.

    When a business collapses, something dangerous can happen to the founder. You can begin to confuse your pain with your innocence. Because you are suffering, you start to feel that the world owes you softness. Because you were judged harshly, you begin to believe that all judgment was unfair. Because some people reduced you to the worst chapter of your life, you start to tell yourself that the consequences themselves were the injustice.

    But collapse hurts other people too.

    That remains one of the most important truths of my life. A business failure is not an abstract event. It lands in wallets, marriages, households, supplier relationships, working weeks, sleep, trust, and plans that other people had made on the assumption that your structure was sound enough to hold. Even when the deeper story is more complex than the public version, the consequences are still real. You do not earn moral seriousness by being the one who suffered most visibly.

    You earn it by being willing to look at the full field of harm without hiding.

    Starting again without illusion is essential because it allows genuine growth and prevents repeating the same mistakes.

    If you start again under illusion, you will build the same distortion in a more sophisticated form. You will use better language. You will present better. You will sound more reflective. But inside the structure, the old confusion remains. You still want admiration before accountability. You still want identity before proof. You still want the world to recognize your intention rather than test your behavior.

    I had to lose that.

    Not all at once. Not elegantly. Certainly not beautifully.

    There existed times when even disciplined action felt humiliating. Studying instead of speaking. Listening instead of asserting. Taking structure seriously, rather than assuming intelligence, could carry me through. Accepting that what I called instinct had, at times, also been ego, exhaustion, fear, self-deception, and badly managed pressure. That is not a poetic discovery. It is rougher than that. It strips something from you.

    Yet, in time, it gives something back.

    It gives proportion.

    When you start again without illusion, you focus on being reliable, not exceptional. You stop seeking to impress and instead ask whether your actions are sound and your work can carry weight. Reliability outweighs attention to presentation or validation.

    That is a much humbler ambition.

    It is also the only one I trust now.

    The entrepreneur who starts again without illusion is often invisible for a while. There is no clapping in it. No cinematic moment. No perfect post. Often, there is no confidence. There is only repetition. Reading. Learning. Showing up. Correcting. Resisting the seduction of premature self-forgiveness. Refusing self-hatred too. Continuing anyway.

    Navigating that middle space is hard.

    You are no longer who you were before, and not yet someone others can place. Your old identity has cracked, and your new one has not earned its shape. You cannot rely on charm, narrative, or being misunderstood. You must be plain enough to be tested.

    Many founders avoid this stage because it feels too small for their previous life. But small is sometimes the medicine. Small is where fantasy dies, and you discover whether you want truth or a more flattering arrangement of facts.

    Starting again taught me that illusion is not only grandiosity. Illusion can also be sentimentality. It can be the hope that, in pain, you have become better. Sometimes it has not. Sometimes pain has only made you tired, defensive, proud in more subtle ways, and anxious to escape the humiliation of being ordinary.

    But recovery begins when ordinary work no longer feels beneath you.

    That is the lesson I paid dearly to learn.

    A second beginning is not noble because it is difficult. It is only worth something if it is honest. Not honest in the theatrical sense. Honest in the structural sense. Honest enough to admit what failed. Honest enough to accept what was harmed. Honest enough to study. Honest enough to rebuild slowly. Honest enough to stop calling illusion by more attractive names.

    Some people will only ever see the collapse.

    Some will only ever see the public version.

    That is their right.

    When you start again, do not aim to restore your old image. Instead, rebuild so your work stands on reality, not illusion. This is what truly matters.

    in FOUNDER JOURNAL
    # Founder Journal Paolo Maria Pavan
    Paolo Maria Pavan June 10, 2026
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