CoRecursive: Coding Stories - Story: From Everest to Startups: Yoshio's Journey of Resilience and Coding
Episode Date: October 2, 2024How do you know what matters? What if training to climb Everest left you certain you were on the wrong career path? Join us as we explore Yoshio's incredible journey from the heights of Everest, to co...ding bootcamps, to finding his true calling in start-ups and communication skills training. Episode Page Support The Show Subscribe To The Podcast Join The Newsletter Â
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Hello. Welcome to Co-Recursive. I'm Adam Gordon-Bell.
Have you ever had a moment where everything seemed to fall apart? Maybe you lost your
job or faced an unexpected change. You find yourself at a crossroads, unsure what to do
next. That's where I was at the start of the summer because I got laid off. And finding a new
and exciting role wasn't easy. And I started to wonder not just about how to find the role that
I was excited about and that I wanted, but how I would even know what it was that I wanted.
During that time, I signed up for a trail race with my brother-in-law, Jamie, and my friend,
Malcolm. And with no job, I threw myself into running to cope and to try to find some control over my life but yet some others who were laid off were
just relaxing Alex was going to spend the summer gardening maybe start looking for a job after that
who knows and for me it was like thank god I had the race because it gave me something to focus on
I could train for the race but then I started started thinking like, maybe that's a problem. And so I reached out to someone to talk about this.
Yeah. I'm not sure if you've ever read Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl.
Yeah. I guess that's what it's about, right? I read it a long, long time ago. Yeah.
Right. Progress is meaning.
But I feel like in some ways though, it's like to put your, to focus your life on like taking the next step towards whatever the goal is.
And then if you reach it or you don't reach it, you set a new goal.
I find that striving to be enjoyable, but it's almost, my wife would probably say it is a problem where it's like, like my car is no neutral and then you never chill so i have multiple goals
and one of my goals is to be a great dad to be a great spouse and i define what that looks like
it's a certain number of trips with my family per year where i'm fully present with them it's a
feeling of unhurriedness in my family life multiple times per day. So I don't think they're mutually exclusive.
The taking a rest
and the go, go, go feeling.
That's Yoshio.
He was introduced to me
as one of the most goal-driven people I'd ever meet.
He was on a multi-year mission
to become the strongest technical co-founder that he could be. And before that, he had a multi-year mission to climb the highest
mountain in the world. He's an expert on setting your mind to something and working hard at it.
So he's the perfect person to talk to about goals and whether I was pointed in the right
direction or maybe pursuing a goal for the wrong reasons. So today we'll share his story
but also his failures and his challenges and how he figured out what he wanted. He's pretty focused
and content right now but that wasn't always the case. So if you're like me and always thinking
about personal and professional challenges but sometimes uncertain about what you should be
pursuing, you'll learn a lot from him. But yeah, as I said, Yoshua wasn't always the master of his own fate.
Back when he was in school, things were a lot different.
I'm in my final year at college preparing for my exams
and thinking how pointless everything I'm studying is
and how I'm just doing it to get through it. But as soon as it's over,
I'm going to set fire to all my previous possessions and start working in tech as
one of the builders, one of the wizards who can write words and turn it into things on a screen.
I was a bad student. I barely made it through college. There are all these things that I was just not
good at and not happy with myself. And I wanted to get better at. So my default state where I
started was definitely someone who was maybe more of a gamer stoner type of persona. And
I didn't know anyone who knew how to code. I met one person who was building,
it wasn't Shopify, it was like one
of these WordPress shopping plugins. He pointed me in the direction of Reddit. I think it was
Learn Programming. So I went on there. For some reason, everyone talked about Learn Python the
hard way. And just bearing in mind, I wanted to make websites. So Learn Python the hard way doesn't
really get you to build a website. I mean, I was building, by the end of that book, I wanted to make websites. So learn by the hard way doesn't really get you to build a website.
I mean, I was building by the end of that book, I was building pretty cool text based adventure
RPGs. I didn't really know how to make, get a button onto onto a screen yet.
Yoshio's idea to learn programming and build websites, along with his frustration with school
and his slacker identity, all that actually started a couple years earlier, and it led him to an idea.
I want to do something whereby when I get to the end of it,
I'm going to be unrecognizable to my current self.
And I must have been 17 or 18,
and a friend of mine in Hong Kong had kind of jokingly brought up, hey, we should climb Everest.
And I was like, haha, that's great. That's really funny. But that really planted the seed.
And just for a little bit more context, growing up, my dad, one of the things that bonded us was
we would go on these two, three-day hikes in Japan, in the Japanese Alps. And on one of these hikes, I met
the owner of this tea house after the hike. And he was around 80, and we were telling him about
our climb, and he mentioned that he'd climbed Everest before. And I was like, wow, this is
the first time I'd ever met anyone who climbed Everest. And it really blew my mind. So that
combined with my friend asking me this, and in college I was looking for a challenge to push myself.
And at some point I was just like, oh, it makes sense.
When I graduate from college, I'm going to try and climb Everest.
At first, climbing Everest was just a fantasy.
But Yoshio and his friend kept sharing links and resources back and forth.
And at one point we were like, hey, we need to learn how to ice climb.
And we found a week-long ice climbing course in New Zealand.
And we agreed that we'd go together.
And that was really, you know,
once I put in the credit card details
and clicked buy, I was in.
So yeah, I ended up going to New Zealand a couple months later and learning
how to ice climb on Fox Glacier and like you said oh I wanted to be a different person on the other
side of it but back when you were planning all this like what do you have anything more specific
in mind that you would get out of this that it would accomplish? I think I was also really looking for adventure. I wanted to do something interesting. And
the default path was I graduate and I go straight into the working world. Climbing Everest takes,
you have to take probably two months out of your year to travel there, to be on the mountain,
summit, come back down.
So I was like, when am I ever going to have two months of time to do something like this?
So I figured now's as good a time as any to go on an adventure.
And I think the desire to be a better, to be unrecognizable was also born out of just
me not being very happy with who I was. I think a common
theme throughout my journey of the past two decades has just been not being fully happy
with who I am. And that's really only changed in the past couple of years where I finally feel like
what I tell my wife was I'm just trying to get to the stage where I'm like a real human.
And human is like a very vague thing, but just like someone I can be proud of.
And a big part of that discomfort with who I was, was because I was someone who didn't have my shit together.
Step one of getting your shit together and climbing Everest is to get in shape.
Yeah. So I had a year where I started to take physical training very seriously. For a whole
year, I was training like a professional athlete. So I was around 120 pounds, not super in shape. And I ended up putting on about 30 pounds of muscle
over those two years. And one of the prerequisites for climbing Everest with this outfit was
having to have climbed a few other high altitude mountains. I climbed a mountain called Alma de
Blom and another mountain called Aconcagua, which is the tallest mountain in South America, before Everest. And while I was doing that, I had realized that the degree I chose in
college, which was management, and the path, my default path, which was to go into banking or
consulting, wasn't what I really wanted. And one of the benefits of having studied some economics was
I knew all about the sunk cost fallacy. So I was like, I'm young. I know I've invested all this
time, but there's no reason I can't try and change the path I'm on right now. So I realized that
coding was kind of like magic and that everything that I wanted to do required coding.
Yoshio wanted to be a maker, a creator, an entrepreneur, someone who could build valuable
and useful things using just his mind. Yes, learning to code is hard, but so is training
for Everest. Learning to code is like a little mental Everest, but in many ways, it's much easier.
I mean, I really feel like coding is magic because you're just
typing some prose or words and then bam, you refresh the page and there's something on your
screen. And when I started actually doing it, it really felt that way. I was just getting,
I mean, the feedback loop is so addictive. That tight feedback loop is such a dopamine rush from, hey, I want to build this UI, and an hour later you have something that kind of resembles what you had in your brain, versus I was doing a lot of physical training at the same time, where I'd say, hey, let me tweak these variables in my training, and maybe three weeks from now, I'll see what actually has happened. So that's a little bit of a slower feedback loop.
After two years of prep and discovering his love of coding,
Yoshio finishes school, and then he heads off to Nepal.
I mean, the climb into Everest is amazing. You fly into this airport called lucla and it's known as the
deadliest airport in the world there there's a plane wreckage on the side where planes have
crashed and because it's hard to get off the mountain they just drag to the side and the
other planes land on that runway put it in a shed or something right drag it out of them well you
know they're probably just like hey the wood's hard to get up.
I'm not sure, but they tell you before you get on a plane,
hey, we only get one shot at landing,
because if the pilot needs to bail,
he's not going to have enough lift to pull the plane out,
so you're going to hit the mountain.
So it's a terrifying experience, but also thrilling.
After the landing is the hike into base camp.
You meet all kinds of people.
Just learning about why people are climbing there is its own fun little quest.
Yeah, it's like, hey, what do you do during non-climbing season? They'll be like, oh, you know, I have like a herd of yaks that I tend to, or I work in the school here. Because they have these, during climbing season, there
are these little villages that spring up, like a ski resort type village. And you kind of sit
around at base camp acclimating, waiting for things to happen. So, I brought, I also brought
a bunch of programming books, a ThinkPad, because I was like, I'm going to have a lot of off time,
I'm going to try and continue this coding journey
at Basecamp. It's very
difficult. The altitude does stuff
to your brain that is hard to
comprehend. So I'm
on the mountain, kind of continuing
to try to build these
text-based RPGs and just be like, I can't
think. And you know, everything else is
interesting, so I don't really want to sit in my tent
doing this. So I'm, I kind of give up after a, so I don't really want to sit in my tent doing this.
So I kind of give up after a couple days.
We do some climbs to other peaks nearby to get the elevation so our bodies get used to the altitude.
And right before we were meant to push to Camp 1, past the Khumbu Icefall, which is this...
It's a large stretch of essentially ice towers, and it's also the most deadly part of climbing of Everest on the Nepal side.
Right before we went to do that push, our advanced team the day before goes up. And as they're going up, a massive ice avalanche gets triggered and kills 16 people, including three of our advanced team.
So the Sherpa who were there to help us prepare our camp for the next day.
So yeah, that was intense.
That was my first experience with the visceral feeling of death. I had spoken to some of these people before on a previous climb
and they're young, fit, full of life. And to kind of learn that they didn't make it that day was
really jarring. What did that feel like? Were you upset? Were you confused?
It's funny because up until that moment, the training and the summit and everything were the most important thing in my life.
And then as soon as that happened, I just completely forgot about any of that even mattering.
These are small personal goals I set for myself, but it's nothing in comparison to what happened to our advanced team, seeing how the community,
the Sherpa community is not very big,
so seeing the impact that had on them.
So I immediately switched to,
okay, what can I do to help?
It feels like I'm there for completely frivolous reasons at that point.
It's just I'm there for a personal, physical challenge.
So did you help? What happened?
So they turned our camp into a walk-in for a personal physical challenge. So did you help? What happened?
So they turned our camp into a walk-in for people who were not injured so badly that they could still walk.
They walked to our camp, and for the seriously injured people there
who had been dug out, I mean, you have to bear in mind that
with an ice avalanche, one cubic meter of ice is
a ton. So when you have an avalanche, it's really hard to survive. But they managed to cut a few
people out of the ice. And there was on hand a very skilled helicopter pilot. So she was
airlifting people from the disaster area to back to base camp.
And yeah, I mean, like I, at one point I remember helping carry someone on a stretcher, but
just, I was way over my head.
I was probably getting in the way more than I was actually helping.
I was, and then I realized that maybe the only thing I could really do was just be emotional
support for some of the people I'd gotten to know on the climb who are more
skilled. So I'd gotten to know our camp doctor. I remember seeing her and she had been down at
the site where all the bodies had been dug up and she was covered in blood. Yeah, I just remember
giving her a hug and trying to like talk to her or console her. But yeah, there wasn't really anything I could do.
I just didn't have the skill set to do anything.
And so, I don't know, what's the lesson?
Yeah, so what's interesting is that year,
so I got back from Everest
and that year just seemed to be full of death.
My best friend took his life a few months
after I got back from Everest.
And then a few of my other like close friends had passed away and unrelated things.
I just got, it was like I got a quadruple dose of just,
oh, wow, this is short.
You have to cherish every moment.
I mean, I think the biggest thing I learned from that was just how you could die.
That's something that I really internalized on that day,
and I've kind of...
It's been one of the primary things driving everything I do.
This idea that not to take things for granted,
because you could be on top of the world one moment,
and the next, everything's gone.
Yoshio eventually used this experience to create a eulogy
for the person he hoped to be when he died.
But before that, back in Hong Kong after Everest,
he found ways to use his coding skills.
So most of what I built around that period
was things that kind of helped you visualize how short life was.
So Tim Urban from the Wait But Why blog,
he has this great blog post on your life in weeks.
And I just became obsessed with that.
The point of the Wait But Why post is simple.
Life is short.
If you count your life in weeks, you get about 4,000 of them.
Maybe 5,000 if you live to 98.
But that's not a lot.
And we often waste weeks without realizing it.
Yoshio wants to make sure he doesn't. So the first app I remember building was you'd put in your
birthday, you put in where you were born, and it would hit, I believe it was the WHO, they had an
API on life expectancy. So it would say, okay, you're a male in Hong Kong.
So you're going to live on average to 83.
You know, you're born this month of this year.
So it would just generate that for you.
And I started turning it into a little bit of a journal.
So you could click into the little boxes and say, oh, this week I did this thing.
And I actually built, I think, two or three versions of that.
I was so obsessed with that visual.
This realization made Yoshio see that life was too short for the usual business management path.
And so he joined a web dev bootcamp. And with some fellow students, he then started an agency.
We were like, hey, we can get other people to pay us to continue learning. So we did that,
quickly pivoted into a TaskRabbit clone startup. And then I attend a peter teal lecture maybe three months into us starting
this task rabbit clone he's doing a book tour for zero to one he says this line about how if you're
young and you don't have much like commitments and you want to be the best anything in the world
you have to surround yourself with the best people and no no offense to the hong kong startup scene
but it's not silicon valley if you want to build the best chinese restaurant in no offense to the Hong Kong startup scene, but it's not Silicon Valley. If you
want to build the best Chinese restaurant in the world, you don't do it in Calcutta. I think one or
two weeks later, I buy a one-way ticket to San Francisco. In San Francisco, he joined another
coding bootcamp with this clear goal of becoming a very strong technical co-founder. Because life
is short, but if you can build a company, if you can build a tech startup with your own coding skills,
you can affect so many people's lives.
But yeah, San Francisco was a big change.
I'd never been around a culture of people
that were so comfortable with just leaning so heavily
into their weirdness.
And being like, I understand that my obsession with i don't know um
brass coins from the 1210s is really strange but i'm gonna own it i'm gonna live live that
that life i remember when uh when bitcoin first started becoming big. This was maybe the second wave. I'm working at a job
and one of my colleagues, we're talking over lunch and he's like, yeah, every single dollar I make,
I turn into Bitcoin straight away. And we become friends and I go to his house and he has three
boxes full of the internet of money. And he's basically taken it upon himself to educate the masses
on how awesome Bitcoin is.
And so he, yeah, he just has these books to just hand out to people.
When I like a book, I might buy three or four to give to friends.
He has three boxes of these books.
So it's experiences like that, which I just really loved.
It's been a while since I've been to a San Francisco house party, but I feel like you
always end up in a corner talking to someone like this. And that's really why I think SF
has such a high density of people building really crazy on the edge of tech companies.
But yeah, it was such a breath of fresh air to be surrounded by
people who didn't care that much about how they appeared externally, but were so into the things
that they were building or doing, where I was like, this... I remember probably one or two
weeks in, I was like, this is the right place. I am now surrounded by the best people in the world. Because if you have
this level of innate curiosity and a desire, and people aren't being held back by external things,
the external world isn't driving your curiosity as much or what you focus on as much.
It's just a winning combination. So then the coding bootcamp starts wrapping up,
and it's time to start job hunting.
Everyone keeps throwing these words around.
I didn't really, you know,
I had to learn all the tech pro lingo,
but everyone's like,
you have to get on a rocket ship,
on a rocket ship.
When someone tells you to join the rocket ship,
you don't say which seat you just get on.
So I'm like, I gotta look for a rocket ship.
So I looked for websites that have rocket ship startups
and there's, I can't remember the name
of the website anymore but it's essentially a list of these are the best startups young
ambitious person can join and i learned about uh a company called radius i find out i had a friend
there so i applied to this company what did their office look like so you go in for the interview
and it's like they have a keg i assume and oh i mean it's one of those multi keg offices with i think you know
with two two ping pong table tables it's in the heart of the financial district just really snazzy
just all the offices all the meeting rooms have like funny names. I think they're named after like different coffee shops.
We were in the same building as Twitch.
So when you're a person who's come in from across the world to be surrounded by the best
people in the world and suddenly you're in the same building rubbing shoulders with Twitch,
it's hard to beat that leader.
So like tell me about the work.
What did you learn?
Yeah, there were a lot of really good programmers.
Most of the other people had CS degrees and I was coming in for a boot camp.
So I started to get exposure to different ways of thinking.
As with a lot of these bigger companies, we would do things like read papers together
and have a weekly paper group meeting.
So that really helped, and then I was exposed to a lot
of different ways of programming. I've started getting good PR reviews. So I started, I definitely
started leveling up as a software engineer while I was there. But I also learned a lot of what not
to do on the business front. But even now, when I think back, the burn rate that they had given their revenue just seemed untenable. And I remember working on features for months with other engineers. So say, I remember one feature in particular, maybe we spent 10 developer months on it. I don't think anyone ended up using it at all. So that was the kind of thing that I learned, hey, there has to be a better way.
So Yoshio leaves Radius. Life is short, right? And he needs to find places where he has impact
and where he's improving. He tries a couple small places and eventually finds his way to
a small crypto startup. So we were in a tiny 200 square foot office in Mountain View
above a coffee shop. And it was just, we're packed into
this room like sardines in a can. And it's like a fun, it's a fun startup office. We're just all
independently working on things to move the business forward. So there's a lot of trust
that, hey, this person is going to figure out the right way to do this thing. That person,
Will is an expert at this thing and he has this kind of thinking. So, we're going to put him on this feature and he's going to crush it. At one point, we had a
tomato plant in the office and the tomato plant starts getting mites. So, I figured
out we could buy ladybugs on Amazon for like six bucks. So I think it's a great idea to bring
some ladybugs into the office to
fight these mites and
anyways. How many ladybugs
did it end up being like
40,000 ladybugs? It's a lot.
It was at least a couple hundred.
Yeah, I mean, not a great
idea. We had
ladybugs in our
fluorescent lights of our workstations at one point, just dropping out.
And they didn't really solve the mite issue either, but it's a fun story.
Working with this small, tight-knit team was a huge learning experience.
It felt like a finishing school for a technical co-founder.
We were trying to find a venture-backed business
in the crypto world. This is around 2017. And we pivoted, I think, four or five times.
We launched so many times I lost count. But the mindset was just so focused on
finding, without over-building things, a business.
And early days, that really taught me,
hey, the business model is the product early on.
The founder of that business, she's just so fast.
So I remember one weekend, we're logging off for work,
and it's Friday, and a report comes out saying that something like only 10 out of around 80 exchanges have any true crypto trading volume. So 70 plus exchanges
are faking it. So the trading volume of the crypto market as a whole is grossly inflated.
Yin, the founder, updated the code to reflect the true crypto volume.
Then she wrote a blog post about it, and that made them part of the news cycle.
And we got back on Monday, and I think we had 25 or 30,000 views on that Monday.
And it's because her blog post had just blown up.
And it was that kind of thinking where I was like, wow,
I would have probably in the past
just started some kind of meeting to discuss it first
and then wireframed it
and maybe we were to ship something two weeks later.
Yeah, so it was just like that speed.
And that's just one of many examples where,
and to this day, I'm still trying to internalize that lesson because I'm such a
planner. When I see that and I see it done at such a, there's a little, there's this intuition that
you have to develop around, okay, I can be fast around certain things, but maybe not so fast
around other things. But she had such a good intuition around, this is the thing that I have
to double down on immediately. Despite moving fast, after years of searching for a successful business model for a crypto startup,
things just weren't working out. And so a pivot to a whole new industry was called for.
The founder returned all the money and was like, hey, I've been talking to the investors and
this idea is something that they would fund. And it's just an execution idea. All we have to do is just build.
And we're building basically a better Carta,
a better version of Carta.
Carta is software for tracking your cap table,
basically who owns what portion of your company.
A lot of the technical challenges are not so interesting anymore
because it's just you're building essentially a crud app.
I mean, there still are interesting challenges, but I'm also not the most senior engineer on the
team. So all the interesting technical problems get given to the more senior engineers. I'm also
not super excited about the mission. So at that point, the main reason for me to work there the two main reasons are i love my team and
the financial incentives and as soon as the pandemic hits the closeness of my team starts to
fray for everyone what does that look like it's kind of uh the invisible part of remote teamwork
and it's just it's so hard to maintain team culture, but where if most of your interactions are just status updates or questions on Slack,
the attempts to create team cohesion are just very long Zoom calls that are actually kind of draining.
There's another problem with this as well, or maybe the pandemic just highlighted it.
But if you're searching for a business model, there's sort of no center to your business. It's
hard to have a connection to a business that's 100% opportunistically driven, right? Changing
pivot by pivot. And yeah, life is short and Yoshio knows how quickly things can change.
And then around this time, he picked up this book, Can't Hurt Me by David Goggins,
the former Navy SEAL. There's a part of my brain that is always kind of,
I'm not sure if it's like
intellectual elitism, but I've always been like, oh, this stuff, this is such a, so meathead-y.
But somehow that period of the pandemic, I was perfectly ready to receive this message of, hey,
if I triple down on suffering and I just tried to embrace suffering as much as possible,
I might change my brain in a way that's like completely astounding to me.
Can't Hear Me is a memoir and kind of self-help book.
Goggins was bullied and mistreated.
He had a troubled childhood, but eventually he becomes the person he wants to be.
I listened to the audiobook.
I really enjoyed it.
But Goggins turned his life around in part using kind of harsh self-criticism,
using the past torments that were thrown at him to kind of motivate himself.
For Yoshio, this resonates with his own experiences in a British boarding school.
There was a person who bullied me at school as well.
I won't mention his name.
But you know, when you're in boarding school, it's relentless.
You go to sleep, and that person might be in the same room as you.
You wake up there, they might be in the same room as you.
You go down to class, they might be there.
And it's just nonstop.
And the philosophy of the boarding school I went to,
that being bullied was character building.
I think Josh Whedon, the director,
went to my boarding school for a little bit of time,
and he talks a little bit about that experience.
And he says, I realized very quickly that to make it here was a matter of survival.
But yeah, it was relentless.
And then, you know, my housemaster definitely, I don't think, handled it the best.
And he definitely contributed to the feeling of isolation that I experienced.
That's fucked up.
Yeah.
It doesn't sound good.
But it's helpful.
I actually, I really appreciate it now.
I would.
Really?
Yeah.
I mean, I would not take back any of it now because I'm really happy with who I am now.
Wow.
I mean, that's surprising.
Is that because of the Goggins
thing of the leaning into it or is it something else? Yeah. I think if I didn't have those
experiences, I'm not sure I would have the capacity I have to suffer and achieve the
things I want to achieve in my life. So I'm really appreciative of it now. And yeah, you took something like Goggins for me to truly leverage it and transform it into something better. But yeah, now I've kind of, I know how to harness it.
Goggins' approach relies on somewhat harsh self-talk, being brutally honest to yourself about your flaws, thinking about the hurtful things that people said, finding the truth in them, and then using them to drive yourself. He also talks about something he calls the cookie jar. So yeah,
he would say, you write down all the bad things and those are cookies that you draw on when you
need help. And I found that extremely helpful. A lot of what I drew from was the bad things or
the things that bothered me. For a long time, I had nightmares about boarding school
because of the feeling of being trapped in a different country far away from your family.
So I would go on these extreme workouts and just when I want to give up, I would
dunk my hand into the cookie cutter and pull out a memory and it would keep me going. And that was really helpful.
I'd put on like a 65 pound rock, like a backpack and go on the Stairmaster and I'd climb to Eiffel Tower worth of stairs.
And, you know, the first time I did it, I thought I was going to die.
I did that every day for, I think, a month first.
I remember just being like, I'm not getting off these stairs until,
it doesn't matter how slow the stairmaster's going,
I'm going to make it to that height.
Were you doing this at a gym or?
Yeah, in my apartment building gym.
So I'm also that weird guy in the gym
who's sweating all over the stairmaster
and making ungodly sounds.
Yeah, just being that weirdo.
Because we were working so much at this company,
sometimes I'd stop work at 10 p.m., 9 p.m.,
and I'd realize, oh, I have to run 12 miles right now.
They're like, well, I committed to this,
so I'd get my running shoes on
and run through to the Golden Gate Bridge and back.
And this is because it was the heart of the pandemic.
SF would be completely empty and it
was just that was actually a lot of fun i was very tired quite a lot of time but it was a lot
of fun too just thinking about it no i mean it sounds beautiful running through empty
san francisco across the bridge and yeah yeah i i also had this i developed a guilty pleasure of
listening to audiobooks written by preppers.
There's this entire world of prepper fiction that's hilarious and also kind of fun.
But if you're running through an abandoned city or a city that feels abandoned at night and you're listening to this, it really feels so immersive.
While Yoshi's unusual quest for self-improvement is making him feel good, his work-life balance
is kind of
another story. Everything I'm doing at this company is a push. It's just a slug to get the features
out. There's just nothing exciting or fun about it anymore. And I'm also not feeling the joy of
improving because everything I'm working on is just the same old type of problem. Meanwhile,
Yoshio discovers that self-improvement,
which he once thought of as nonsense, can really improve his life.
So he starts to lean into that.
So that's also when I start to think about
what does the ideal life I want to live look like.
So I start writing out what do I want to do.
Combined with all the Goggins stuff,
really gave me the gave
me the conviction to say hey I'm gonna I'm gonna take a year out at least and I'm gonna work on
something I'm interested in which is operationalizing or systematizing self-improvement
I'm like so into just leveling up myself I'm like this is for me. So why don't I see if I can find a business in
here? So I leave Pulley and I'm like, open world RPG. I could do anything. I'm like, well, I know
that one of the first things that I wanted, I was desperately craving my last couple of months at
Pulley was leveling up my skills. So I wrote down all the skills I wanted to get better at. I wanted to have some rudimentary product data skills so that I could understand when people
talk about retention and all these things, fancy numbers. I had no idea what that meant. So I was
like, I want to be able to be in a conversation and get that stuff. I wanted to know how to design
stuff, do UI UX. So I was like, okay, given that I want to learn
all these things, I should really get better at learning. So I pick up a book called Ultra
Learning, which I know you've read as well. And that's also where I first hear about Tristan and
Michael. The book is great. It's about diving headfirst into a learning project, hitting it
with intensity. The author, Scott Young, he tests these ideas out on Tristan,
who wants to become a better public speaker.
Tristan finds Michael, who is his speaking coach,
and Tristan goes from being terrified of public speaking
to winning the Toastmasters Best Speaker in North America award.
But it's a real-world example showing that with enough effort and planning,
you can master any skill
on an accelerated timeline. And I read that book, and I read about Tristan and Michael,
and I Google them, and I find out they have an online course, cohort three of ultra speaking,
and it's priced really low. I'm surprised at how affordable it is. So, K. Anders Ericsson with
his deliberate practice in Peak, he always talks about using a flight simulator, how jet fighter
pilots would use flight simulators to simulate the hardest parts of dogfights or what have you.
And that's how they got so much better. And I remember thinking about how do I apply this to
programming or how do I apply this to any of my other skills? It's just, it's not super clear. And we start ultra speaking and they start these games and
they put you in these really uncomfortable positions off the bat. And it's, whoa,
this is really hard. And I instantly think about K. Anders Ericsson and the flight simulators.
And I'm like, wow, this is just like that.
And I'm like, okay, but let's really see how useful this is. And about halfway through the cohort,
I'm kind of nervous the whole time whenever they ask for volunteers in the main room.
So, speaking in front of 20 other people. And whenever they ask for volunteers,
I want to raise my hand, but I can't. My body won't move.
And at one point, I get mad at myself, and my hand shoots up, and I'm like,
oh, crap, and it's too late.
I'm committed at that point.
It's around, I believe, rapid-fire analogies.
And I go, a motorcycle is like building a business because it's fast and thrilling.
Meeting your friends is like blue cheese because it's delicious you just say these words off within two second timers
and when i finish i've landed like a perfect set and i feel great and i remember just feeling for
the first time like wow i don't need to go into conversations having prepped everything. I can start with a rough idea and my brain will fill
in the blanks. And that for me was one of my first activation points where I was like, wow,
speaking is freeing and this just unlocked me. And for a lot of the course, I'm thinking, hey,
there are so many things that could be improved here. This is
my first time experiencing a learning style that is so practical, so experiential, so applied.
And I remember kind of hoping that we could work together. I'm like, I have all these other plans.
So I'm like, okay, I'll shelve that idea and maybe revisit it after I finish my learning.
But one week after I finished the cohort, I get an email
in my inbox from Michael asking if I know any software engineers. I'm like, this is perfect.
This is a sign from the universe. So I respond being like, yeah, I'm a software. I think Michael,
Michael's keen to know I was a software engineer because I had mentioned in one of my reps during
the cohort,
we started working on some projects together.
And I mean, at the same time, I'm not fully committed at this point.
I still want to go through my learning journey. I'm still thinking about building a startup to systematize self-improvement.
But the more I work with them, the more I realize,
hey, there really is something here.
And there's really something unique about the way Tristan and Michael
think that I think could be a really powerful... If we combine our three brains, I think there
could be something here that's world-changing. I know that sounds really grandiose, but I'm at
this phase where while I'm exploring my next phase of life, where I want to do something that's really high leverage.
You need your next Everest or whatever.
Yeah, exactly.
Yoshio is the classic startup grinder
from his time in San Francisco, right?
Working long weeks on the next big thing,
pivoting until you find success.
But Tristan and Michael are different.
Tristan is a surfer.
And you can tell from a mile away that he's a surfer
just from his hair and his beard.
And the way he walks, his demeanor, it's very laid back, very calm.
He's like a Labrador.
So supportive, so full of ideas.
Everything is exciting.
Michael's a little bit more like a cat.
He's a little bit more reserved, but just as loving.
Michael and Tristan have this such a funny, beautiful dynamic where they're already basically a married couple. And then now I'm coming in to this relationship. And I'll never forget when we decided to start taking things more seriously. And this is really when I realized, hey, this is not your stereotypical Silicon Valley venture-backed startup. This is in Tristan's house in Los Angeles.
In the middle of the pandemic, I hadn't really had any social interactions until that moment.
I'm sitting in a sauna, a two-person sauna sandwiched between them.
Why was it in the sauna? Why was that?
I mean, we're also very into sauna, cold, plungy type things so and tristan had it and we were i think the
meetup was just to get to know each other and maybe to work on one project together just to
get a feel for how it could work if we were to really commit to each other so i was as good a
place as any to to hang out and uh they're asking me what my intentions are. It's almost like I'm asking
them for their hand in marriage. Remember, Yoshio's goal since Hong Kong,
maybe even since Everest training, was to be the strongest technical co-founder he could be.
He has all this Valley startup experience that he's built up over time. And now he's joining
UltraSpeaking as their third founder. But there's a big difference between his crypto startup and
UltraSpeaking. Tristan and Michael weren't out there hunting for the business to create.
They had their goal, to teach people how to communicate. And this is perfect for Yoshio,
who wanted to operationalize self-improvement. This is totally something that aligns with his
deep values in a way that the crypto startup or the cap table tracker probably never would be able
to. But also because of his learning and
his leveling up, he brings a lot of ideas to the table. User research, responding to feedback,
the stuff that he learned through countless pivots at the last place, they can be really valuable
when you have a core mission that you care deeply about. It just takes him some time to convince
Michael and Tristan of this. People say that a co-founder relationship is like a marriage.
And some say that if you take kids out of the equation, it's arguably more intense.
And I really believe that to be true.
We've definitely had a lot of our classic married couple disagreements and arguments.
The equivalent of arguing over the finances for us would be
arguing over marketing copy. For example, a lot of relationships that work involve couples who
are married and are polar opposites. And I feel like that's very true for us. And a lot of the
stuff that we cleared up early on in those sauna type interviews was figuring out
if our core values aligned, if we wanted the similar things. And I think because we have that
as a basis for our relationship. And I've learned a lot from both of them on just,
hey, there are times where my approach is terrible and I have to
take a step back and just let things go how they're going to be.
And that's actually the best path.
I think when I first started working with Tristan and Michael, I was maybe too framework
focused or too rigid with, oh, this is the best practice.
This is how you should do things.
And realizing that there are lots of ways to skin a cat.
And then another thing changed.
Between meeting Tristan and Michael, getting married, planning for fatherhood,
and then eventually having a baby, the Goggins-style negative experiences
motivating himself that way, it started to become less important.
Because Yoshio found something else. I did notice that my fuel source started to become less important because Yoshio found something else.
I did notice that my fuel source started to change a little bit as I went on this journey,
where it started off primarily through anger and evolved into more of a mixed, a hybrid engine,
where I'd still use some of those angry ideas, but then I started introducing like an alter ego i started thinking
about i was like what would my our future kid want me to be like and i should do this for them
like you said that at the beginning that you were finally happy or willing to admit that you were
a human or something like that becoming a human yeah i mean now with the full context of the story
because i didn't understand what you meant maybe you could explain i mean maybe it's i got that
idea of wanting to become a human from a japanese book and a lot of japanese poetry and writing is kind of vague, read between the lines. For me, it's about taking life seriously.
And I say it's becoming a human because you're doing the things that you should be doing.
You should be taking care of yourself. You should be trying to help other people
who are less fortunate than yourself. You should be striving to improve. You should also be
striving for the betterment of society.
And maybe becoming a human is also just this idea of,
because a lot of the becoming a human idea came from me preparing for fatherhood.
It was just becoming a good role model is really what it is.
It's, okay, can I become someone who I'm proud of,
who I would want my kid to emulate?
And instead of saying becoming a phenomenal human or becoming a great human, I think it's
just becoming a human because this should be our natural state.
So now, to go back to my trail racing question, I guess what I was trying to ask was really,
how do I know if the goal of getting better at running was a good goal
or just a distraction? How do I know if I'm pursuing the right thing? And now, Yoshio,
who's happily a co-founder, who's happily a father and husband and not taking his life for granted,
now he really has an answer for this. Given our limited time, figure out what brings you meaning, and that could be anything,
and work backwards from your ultimate vision for what you want to accomplish with your life.
And then kind of set near-term challenges to force yourself to learn if you're on the right path,
if your vision even makes sense. I actually like to time
constrain them. So Everest was a couple of years. At Pulley, I had set around a three-year timeline
of, hey, I want to reassess after three years. So set time-constrained goals. And when you get
there, take a step back and have a look around and see, hey, is this right? And what's my next step?
I think for me, the lesson is to take life seriously.
You don't have that much time here.
That was the show. Reflecting on Yoshio's story, I realized how the process I was going through
after losing my job was natural.
I had had this goal multi-year and then things changed and it was a natural time for me to reassess.
If you constantly are reassessing, you know, you won't get anywhere.
But I think it makes sense, like Yoshio did, to pick an interesting and valuable direction and commit to it for years.
But then occasionally you step back and you think about things.
He was a planner.
I don't think that's my strength.
I like the doing.
And so running was a welcome distraction
when I was trying to do this reflection.
But I have had time to reflect.
And I have had time to decide what makes sense for me.
And so relatedly, I'm happy to report I'm starting at a new job at Pulumi. I'll be teaching
people how to do infrastructure as code. And maybe it's not operationalizing self-improvement,
like Yoshio's latest goal, but I'm excited about it and it aligns with me. And so yeah,
thanks to everyone who pointed me towards various job offers or people to talk to. I got to meet a lot of interesting people before accepting this role.
And thanks to Yoshio for sharing your journey.
I talked about UltraSpeaking on Twitter before.
It's really a transformative experience.
I was part of a cohort just like he was, and I highly recommend it.
And I understand what he saw in it that he wanted to dedicate himself towards it.
So yeah, you should check it out. And thank you as always to the Patreon supporters of the podcast. That's been
super helpful, especially when you get laid off. And I would recommend to everybody out there to
set aside some money or have a plan or a second source of income in case layoffs or other bumps
in the road hit you. So thank you to all of you.
Thank you to the people who pointed out opportunities to me
or introduced people to me during this downtime
or just reached out and said they appreciate what I do.
Never be afraid to reach out or say hi or mention opportunities to me.
I try to get back to everybody.
Probably occasionally failed that, but I always appreciate it.
And until next time, thank you so much for listening.