Thought Leadership Essays

Entrepreneurship and Spirituality – An Unlikely Combination?

December 8, 2012

Vikas Narula

When I first embarked on the entrepreneurial journey 3 years ago, all I could think about was “surviving”.  Will it work? Can I make it? What if I fail?

In 2010, I had about a 7 month runway to get Keyhubs off the ground. By month six we still had no revenue.  There was interest from potential clients, but nothing to show for it.  I was running on empty and getting prepared to call it quits.

Fostering Faith

Then, completely out-of-the-blue, a friend called.  He was a high-flying executive at a Fortune 500 company.  I had reached out to him months earlier but never heard anything. Now he was ready to use our product — just in time.

That project gave us enough fuel to fight another day – or at least another month or so. When I had money to pay this month’s mortgage, I didn’t know where the money would come from for next month’s mortgage.

And we lived that way for the next 24 months.

It was intense and stressful, but as time went on, we got so used to operating this way, that it became “normal”. After some point my wife and I didn’t even question whether or not we would have enough money for the next month, we just knew it would come.

It’s not like we sat around and hoped for cash to fall from the sky. We had to work hard. We had to keep moving. We had to shake the tree. But, as much as business people would not like to admit, many things were invariably beyond our control.

This whole experience greatly reinforced our faith – faith in ourselves and faith in a Power Beyond Ourselves. With each passing day my faith in the Universe grew.  

Stumbling Upon Forgiveness

By the middle of 2011, things started to stabilize. It dawned on me that I would not be enjoying the fruits of entrepreneurship had it not been for two bosses that I deeply resented. I worked for two other companies prior to starting Keyhubs and I left both of them because of a “bad” boss.

I carried hefty grudges towards them, but as things got better, as I started to enjoy some measure of success, I could no longer ignore the fact that those bosses were in large part the reason for my professional “renaissance”. I realized that my “enemies” were actually my friends. I wrote about the experience in this blog post, but what I left out was that in the process of thanking my enemies, I experienced true forgiveness for the first time in my life.

I forgave wholeheartedly, with every ounce of my being, and in doing so, something miraculous and completely unexpected happened.

I found Love.

Uncovering Love

By exercising forgiveness and letting go of some my biggest and long-held resentments, I jarred loose a vast thicket of hang-ups and other resentments that had built up over decades and kept me from the deepest recesses of my soul. By not forgiving, I was unknowingly keeping myself from my own Joy.

Rushing waters of Love flowed out from the core of my being like never before. A pent up force held back by a veil of my own creation broke through and, like a tsunami, it overwhelmed me. It became undoubtedly evident that there was a Power Beyond Me, within me.

By the beginning of 2012 I was walking around like a man who had fallen in love for the first time. Think Tom Cruise on Oprah’s couch – except I was nuttier because my Katie Holmes was within me – within my own heart – and She wasn’t going anywhere.

This completely turned my life upside down. I went into the world and viewed everything through the lens of openness and compassion. Everyone was beautiful, familial and glowing. I wanted nothing more than to embrace them all.

It is difficult to fully explain all the facets of this new found Love, but suffice to say it completely and utterly transformed me.

The Journey

If you would have told me 3 years ago that my biggest lessons and acquirements in this adventure were going to be about faith, forgiveness and love, I would have laughed you out of town.

The journey began in response to professional dissatisfaction and it turned into a spiritual odyssey. I embarked with questions of economic survival and was answered with soulful epiphanies. I thought entrepreneurship was about material success and changing the world, but it has been more about personal growth and changing myself.

Entrepreneurship and spirituality may be an unlikely combination, but for me the two are now inseparable.

I share this story because sometimes we embark on a path with a set plan and specific bottom-line outcomes in mind. As we progress on the journey, we may discover that our endeavor is about much more than our pre-conceived notions of “success”. We may find that the parallel personal expedition, and the lessons found therein, are what it is really about. This unanticipated voyage may take us to a place that dwarfs the original plan and exceeds our own wildest expectations. In some cases, it is the back-story that deserves the headline.

What is your “back-story” and how has it transformed you?

Vikas Narula (@NarulaTweets) is Creator and Co-Founder of Keyhubs (@Keyhubs) – a software and services company specializing in workplace social analytics. He is also Founder of Neighborhood Forest – a social venture dedicated to giving free trees to kids every Earth Day.

Photos courtesy of this site.

Comments

  1. Darshan Khatavkar |
    11 Years Ago

    Hi Vikas … As always, your blog post is very personal, insightful and provides a dramatic insight into your journey. I am thankful for getting to know you better and wish you all the very best.

    • Vikas Narula |
      11 Years Ago

      Hi Darshan,

      Thank you for the kind feedback – I am glad we connected and continue to dialogue about this topic.

      Looking forward to our next meeting.

      Best,
      Vikas

  2. Michael Bischoff |
    11 Years Ago

    Thanks for making part of your internal story visible. I’m very grateful to read about. I resonate with many parts of it. I look forward to continuing to conversation about our journeys.

    • Vikas Narula |
      11 Years Ago

      Hi Michael,

      Thank you for the feedback – glad you enjoyed it. I am looking forward to continuing our dialogue as well.

      Best,
      Vikas

  3. Taruna |
    11 Years Ago

    Hi Vikas, I truly enjoy reading your posts and wish to make those inner connections as well. Best wishes.

    • Vikas Narula |
      11 Years Ago

      Thank you Rucchi! Wonderful to hear from you. I would love to hear about the connections you have made.

      Best,
      Vikas

  4. Bruce Lewin |
    11 Years Ago

    Hi Vikas, great post and a great story!!! Have a great festive season…

    • Vikas Narula |
      11 Years Ago

      Thank you Bruce! Great to hear from you.

      Have a wonderful Holiday!

      – Vikas

  5. David Adams |
    11 Years Ago

    This article is exactly what I needed at this moment. Thanks for the reminder of really what’s important in this life. This is fuel for all entrepreneurs and business people to “keep calm, and carry on” because the rewards are totally unexpected and powerful.

    • Vikas Narula |
      11 Years Ago

      Thank you for sharing David – I am happy the post spoke to you at just the right time.

      Best,
      Vikas

  6. Suresh |
    11 Years Ago

    Well written and the right approach mentioned. Look forward to catchup soon.

    Best regards
    Suresh

    • Vikas Narula |
      11 Years Ago

      Thank you for sharing your thoughts Suresh.

      Best,
      Vikas

  7. Satya |
    11 Years Ago

    Hi Vikas
    I happened to read your blog and really loved it, especially the spirituality and entrepreneurship. I am in pursuit of spirituality and open to entrepreneurship, what I am not sure is whether the latter would serendipity me like the former serendipity’d you.

    I am happy for you 🙂

    – Satya

    • Vikas Narula |
      11 Years Ago

      Hi Satya,

      Thank you for the feedback – glad you enjoyed it. Sounds like no matter what you do, you will be serendipity’d. : )

      Best Wishes on your unique journey!

      Vikas

  8. Thomas B |
    11 Years Ago

    Hello Vikas, read this post long time ago and it reflected somehow…
    Many who enter the world and try to prove their own ideas are ready to do “what it takes” to see them prevail and succeed, to get the fruits they hoped for. If they don’t succeed the conditioned reflex tells them to push harder and very often they end up doing things that hurt first others and then themselves in the long run.
    I wanted to thank you for bringing that sense of trust and reality out here in the open. Rather than fighting and kicking it conveys the idea of acceptance and floating in the calmness you live in.

    • Vikas Narula |
      11 Years Ago

      Hi Tom,

      Thanks so much for sharing your thoughts and providing feedback – nice to hear this post stimulated some reflection and truth for you.

      So nice to get your note.

      Warmest Regards,
      Vikas

  9. Rohan Bhansali |
    10 Years Ago

    Vikas, extremely well expressed. Wow.

    • Vikas Narula |
      10 Years Ago

      Thank you Rohan!

      Best,
      Vikas

  10. Rosemary Sundin |
    10 Years Ago

    Vikas, this is a great read. Reminds me of a saying: “Nothing resists a will that stakes even existence for its fulfillment.” You’re walking proof that we literally become what we think about. Thanks so much for sharing this with me.

    • Vikas Narula |
      10 Years Ago

      Thank you Rosemary. Great quote. So true.

      Best,
      Vikas

  11. Ananda Kesler |
    9 Years Ago

    Loved reading how your journey into entrepreneurship coincided if not inspired your transforming inner journey into forgiveness, faith, and love! What an amazing back story definitely worth the headline. Your honesty, candor and willingness to share these deeply meaningful experiences that might not be the ‘norm’ in the world of business (love and faith in buisness?!) 😉 are heartwarming and so inspiring. It reminds me of all my own endless moments of serendipity and that I have no business losing faith. In life or business. Thank you for that!

    • Vikas Narula |
      9 Years Ago

      Dear Ananda,

      Thank you so much for reading my post and sharing your thoughts. Yes, it feels good to speak openly and freely about the personal journey in the context of business. Why separate the two? : )

      Looking forward to reading your posts as you venture on the path of creating and sharing.

      Loving Regards,
      Vikas

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