An amazingly well written and funny article. And it is that much funny because it is so uncomfortably close to the truth. Written by a Silicon Valley entrepreneur himself – Sunil Rajaraman. Thanks to Amit Paranjape for pointing me to the article.
Here is the link: https://medium.com/@subes01/this-is-your-life-in-silicon-valley-933091235095#.nya91mz6o
and here is the text:
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You wake up at 6:30am after an Ambien-induced sleep. Itâs Friday. Last night at The Rosewood was pretty intenseâââyou had to check out Madera and see if there is any truth to the long running Silicon Valley rumors. You were disappointed, but at least you did get to see a few GPs from prominent VC firms at the bar. Did they notice you? Did you make eye contact? You remind yourself they are not real celebritiesâââonly well known in a 15-mile radius to the Techcrunch-reading crowd.
Your non-English-speaking nanny shows up at 7:30am on the nose. You are paying her $24/hour and entrusting her (and Daniel the Tiger) with raising your child. You tell yourself that itâs ok for nowâââwhen heâs old enough heâll (someday) be in public school in the Palo Alto school district.
You commit to being a better parent this weekend and spending more quality time with him as you browse through the latest headlines on Flipboard. You recently realized he may not be the next Mark Zuckerberg after allâââstill you send him to a music school even though heâs only 3. You swear heâs a genius because he can say a few 4-syllable words and can clap perfectly to the beat of âCall me Maybeâ. Heâs special. He is destined for greatness and youâll make sure he achieves every ounce of it. After all, both of you are so smart and accomplished.
You ask your nanny if she has any availability to watch your son this weekend. Bummerâââyou wish Cal Academy of Sciences hadnât sold you on the annual pass 11 months ago. You figured youâd be going there every weekend, but only ended up going the one time. Not a break even proposition for you.
Your wifi enabled coffee maker downloads the perfect instructions to brew a cup of Blue Bottleâââand you donât have to do anything. The Roomba purrs in the background while you continue to read from your smartphone. You see a few articles about Trump and how crazy he isâââsomehow this comforts you.
You decide to share an article about Brexit from âThe Atlanticâ, which will somehow shed light to all your friends as to why it happened. The article is 1,000 words longâââyou only read half of it, but thatâs good enough. It captures all the arguments youâve been wanting to make for the past two months to your friends. Will this be the Facebook post that finally spurns your friends into action? You realize your Facebook friends all agree with your political views and social views already.
Fifteen minutesâââonly 3 likesâââbetter luck next time. The FacebookNewsfeed algorithm totally fucked youâââyou should have shared from your browser, not your phone, and perhaps at a more optimal time.
But then you realize another friend already shared the article. You feel stupid.
Your spouse hurriedly gets ready for workâââyou are a two income family and you have to be one for now. The spreadsheet shows that with only three more yearsâ savings, you can finally afford that 2 bedroom condo in San Bruno. So what if the weather is shitty 340 days out of the year? At least youâll be homeowner in the Bay Areaâââand nothing says youâve âmade itâ like being able to afford a down payment. Besides, San Bruno is âup and comingââââand Youtube has an office there.
Your commute to work sucks, but at least its an opportunity to catch up on Podcasts so you can have great conversations over cocktails with your friends. Should you listen to âSerial Season 2â today? Or should you listen to that amazing âStartupâ podcast? So many choices, so little time. You instead decide to expand your horizons by trying a new playlist on Spotifyâââsomething about Indian-infused-jazz music. It sounds great. It makes you feel cultured.
You decide to park your car using âLuxeâ today. You justify it to yourself by saying that parking garages are only $10 less expensive. And you have to spend all of that time walking back and forth. And besidesâââtoday you are meeting some friends after work for dinner and youâll be on the other end of town. You canât decide whether youâll take Uber or Lyft to the dinner from your officeâââdecisions, decisions.
You are the Director of Business Development at your startup. You arenât even sure what that means, but the startup seems to be doing well. Your company recently raised a round and was featured in Techcrunch. You have 5,000 stock options. You arenât exactly sure what that means, but that must be good. If you exit, maybe that will mean money toward a down payment.
Your day starts in Salesforce. You have to email a bunch of people. You briefly contemplate a business idea you have that will totally kill Salesforce and Facebook at the same time. But you need a technical co-founder. Eventually youâll get to itâââafter all, youâre smart and destined for greatness yourself. And your friends all tell you how you should start something someday.
Your 27-year-old CEO calls an ad-hoc all-hands meeting and regales about company culture and how your mission is to âkill email because itâs brokenâ. He wants to make every enterprise company in the world switch to your product. Heâs never worked for an enterprise company, or any other company at all.
The sales team got rowdy the night before. They missed their quota, but it was not their faultâââit was implementationâs fault for fucking up a major deal. Alsoâââmarketing didnât send them enough inbound leads for them to hit quota. Maybe next quarter. You trade emails with your college buddies on Gmail about how ridiculous Kevin Durant is for joining the Warriors. You come to realize email is working just fine for you. You feel depressed for a moment. Your summer intern is trying to figure out a Snapchat strategy.
Itâs time for that afternoon coffee to keep you going through the day. You head over to Philz with some co-workers. You order a vegan donut and very clearly ask the barista for 3 Splendas. He was clearly a Splenda short, but the line is long and you want to be civil. You are above mentioning something like this to the baristaâââyou let it pass and feel a âmicro aggressionâ bubbling inside.
You have to decide where to go for dinner tonight. You look at Yelp for a place thatâs within 1 mile and is rated at least 3.5 stars. But really youâre looking for something 4 stars plus and at least $$$. What will your friends think of you if you pick a place thatâs too cheap? But you also donât want to go $$$$ because thatâs too expensive. You have good taste. This comforts you.
You realize your reservation with your spouse at the French Laundry is coming up this weekend. Your calendar app reminds you of this. Youâve been looking forward to it for months. You canât wait to take perfectly Instagrammed photos of the meal to go along with your perfectly Instagrammed life.
#San Francisco is trending on Twitter. You realize the San Francisco journalism community is angry about somethingâââthey are full of rage at the way a homeless person is being treated. The reporters all share photos and videos of the homeless person, but no one talks to him.
Itâs time for some afternoon Facebook browsing. Your friends are all doing SO well. You are secretly jealous of your friend who just bought a house in the Noe. You speculate as to how rich they must be after their exit from LinkedIn. Even though they were only employee #500 they must have done well. You briefly try to do the math in your head. Maybe that can be you at your current startup. Itâs only a matter of time.
More browsing. One friend was employee #5 at a company that just sold to Twitter. They must have made so much money, you think. You like the status, but you are jealous. Another friendâs kid seems to be more advanced than your kid based on the Vine they just shared of them playing the piano. Damnit, need to be a better parent.
You go to Redfin to see how much they paid for their house.
You briefly daydream about how you once had an opportunity to work at Google pre-IPO. And that you could have joined Facebook right after IPOâââand imagine thatâââthe stock price has tripled in a short amount of time. Would that have been the big break you needed?
Your CEO grabs you in a panic and asks you to do a quick analysis for a board member. The board member was base jumping in Mexico and panicked about something related to burn rate and strategy. The CEOâs job is at risk.
You do the grunt work and analysis, and finish it just in time for him to breathe a sigh of relief and tell you what an âExcel Ninjaâ you are. Your analysis makes you realize the company maybe should have saved money on office space, and perhaps the rock climbing wall and Segways. You realize your CEO knows nothing about your business.
Your mind briefly drifts off and you thinkââââis this all really worth it? should I move to Seattle, Austin, or maybe even Florida?â After all there is no state tax and you could live a great quality of life there with an actual house with your beautiful family.
You browse Redfin again. Hmmm. Maybe not Austinâââwhat about something less ambitious like Fremont, Morgan Hill or Milpitas? That wouldnât solve your commute problems, you think. It would be more affordable though.
You know what? If you move to Austin you could somehow get by. After all your spouse is so amazing at baking. She could easily make a living selling her cupcakesâââshe has so much talent as a cook and you could afford culinary school. Worst case, she also has an amazing knack for craft jewelry. The three pieces she sold on Etsy last month are evidence of that. How talented both of you are.
And heyâââif you move to Austin, you can finally build that home with a âZen minimalistâ theme youâve been dreaming of. You go to Bluhomeâs websiteâââtheir design aesthetic perfectly matches yours. You just need to save the money to make it happen. You browse Pinterest and Houzz for ideas on how to decorate the interior. Is Red or Navy Blue TOO bold of a color? You donât know. Maybe you should use an on-demand service for that.
You forgot to order groceries and the nanny needs milk for your kid ASAP. She texts you frantically in broken English. Thank goodness for Instacartâââyou spend $10 in delivery costs, but you need to add a bunch of items to your cart to hit the minimum threshold. You add a few squeezies, some bananas and a few artisan cheeses to hit the mark. You realize you havenât stepped into a grocery store for monthsâââbut donât worryâââyour opportunity cost of time is way too high at the moment. Especially if you factor in those stock options.
Almost time for dinner. You are having dinner tonight with the âChief Hacking Officerâ at the company and the âVP of Awesomenessâ. You arrive at the restaurant, and they marvel at your tasteââânice job surfing Yelp.
Your dinner conversation centers around how autonomous vehicles are going to be better in the long run than ordinary cars for a variety of reasons. And something about how Elon Musk handles meetings. You are all too busy making your own points and citing articles to really listen to each other. You order the $17 dollar Risotto and the $9 glass of Pleasanton-brewed IPA.
On your ride home you find the time to catch up on the Malcolm Gladwell podcast. What an interesting guy he isâââheâs so smart and he makes youthink about things.
After coming home you briefly use that â7 minute workoutâ app, which scientists have proven is way more effective than a one-hour cardio workout. You got your exercise in for the dayââânice work.
You and your spouse get ready for bed. Whatâs in your Netflix queue? Well, you have to catch up on âMaking a Murdererâ since itâs been all over the news lately. And letâs not get too far behind on âMr. Robotâ since itâs so critically acclaimed. For lighter fare, and if you have time, you can always try âLast Week TonightââââJohn Oliver always says exactly what youâre thinking in your headâââjust funnier than you would have said it.
You quietly shuffle to bed, tired from the long, hard day. You check your email, Twitter, Facebook and Snapchat one last time before bedtime. You donât think youâll have enough energy to check LinkedIn todayâââand besidesâââtheir mobile UI is not very good. Maybe you can start a company that will disrupt LinkedIn? They did just sell for a bunch of money after all.
Your last thought before bedâââshould you switch to the Android ecosystem? You are on the âSâ iPhone replacement cycle and you are getting impatient. But then you realize you are so heavily invested in the Apple ecosystem that it may not make sense.
You briefly use mobile Safari to browse for Vipassana retreatsâââyou hear a 10 day retreat in Soquel may be the ticket to shake things up. You realize itâs not going to be possible. You download a meditation app. You turn it off. You donât have time.
You briefly recall your ride home on the 280 tonight. The sun was setting. It was beautiful. You realize you live in paradise.