What you can actually do
Here's the system that I built from ten days of deliberate exposure to rejection.
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Rejection follows a pattern, and so does our reaction. It’s so predictable that I was even able to identify its variables and put down a formula to predict the magnitude of hurt that it produces. As explained in the previous newsletter, hurt = 2.5 Loss Aversion × Identity Proximity × Status Dynamic × Public Visibility × Rumination Time. Each of these factors has been explained here. But why is it easy to predict the trajectory of hurt? Because it is difficult to break free from the loop, and the hurt usually turns to pain. And that is because traditional advice fails to address the problem. No amount of motivational talk can help you break free unless you work on the above formula. Why?
Because neither ignorance nor endurance works on rejection.
Rejection hurts, but the best founders do not let it turn into pain. I wanted to understand it, and therefore, the 10-day rejection experiment that proved that if rejection was inevitable, maybe mastery wasn’t about avoidance, as traditional wisdom would tell us, but repetition. So I repeated it 10 times in 10 days, chasing a ‘NO’. Ten micro-failures of ego. Each one a data point in learning how to turn ‘NO’ into neutrality.
Rejection and failure are deeply linked to feelings of belonging, self-worth, and self-esteem. Experiences of social or personal rejection can undermine one’s sense of value, causing emotional pain and prompting doubts about one’s place in groups or relationships. People who are more sensitive to rejection tend to have lower self-esteem and psychological well-being. When rejection is frequent or feels highly personal, the hurt it generates turns to pain.
Neuroscience confirms that social rejection activates the same brain regions as physical pain. The dorsal anterior cingulate cortex and anterior insula light up exactly as they would if you'd been physically injured. Evolution wired this overlap because, in prehistoric tribes, being excluded was dangerous. Belonging was life.
So when a VC says, "We're passing," your ancient brain hears: "You're out of the group."
To your nervous system, both mean the same thing: danger.
Every replay is a re-injury.
The skill isn't avoiding pain. It's learning to move through it faster.
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Can rejection be trained like a muscle?Exposure therapy techniques show that facing feared situations, such as rejection, in a gradual and controlled way helps people desensitise and recover faster from setbacks. That was the idea behind my 10-day experiment. Research supports the idea that “Rejection Therapy,” a practice of intentionally seeking out small rejections (e.g., making improbable requests to strangers), can boost resilience and self-confidence by normalising the experience and removing the stigma or personal shame associated with being turned down. Psychologists recommend starting small, increasing ‘stakes’ over time, and employing self-compassion practices during recovery. Meditation and reframing negative self-talk are also important strategies to maintain self-esteem during the process.
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Why traditional advice fails
Traditional advice treats rejection as something to ignore or endure. It ignores the nervous system entirely. Your brain doesn't care about your grit. It's running ancient software designed to keep you safe from exile. You can't logic your way out of a biological alarm system. You have to train it.
"Don't take it personally" advice fails because rejection IS personal from your point of view. When someone says no to your work, they're rejecting something you created, something that came from you. Pretending otherwise doesn't build resilience. It kills honest reflection.
A hundred bad pitches don't make you better. They make you ‘practiced’ at bad pitches. One pitch, followed by honest feedback, followed by one meaningful adjustment - that's growth.
"Toughen up" confuses endurance with progress.
Grit without iteration just extends the pain curve. You're not getting stronger, you're getting numb.
What actually works is reiteration: reflection + adjustment + another attempt.
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Acknowledge the stingRaw repetition without learning is wasted motion. What compounds isn't volume. It's deliberate refinement.
When someone says NO to your work, they're rejecting something you created, something that came from you. Pretending otherwise doesn't build resilience. It kills honest reflection.
The founder who can't acknowledge the sting also can't extract the signal. You need to feel it to decode it. When moderate, rather than severe, rejection experiences are repeated in a safe setting, some individuals show milder emotional reactions and more adaptive social behaviours over time.
Most research and therapeutic guidelines show that controlled, repeated exposure to rejection is much more likely to produce habituation than sensitisation, provided it is done in a supportive and gradual manner.
The right move isn't denial. It's separation: acknowledge the hurt, analyse the feedback, adjust, and move again.
.png)
Can rejection be trained like a muscle?Exposure therapy techniques show that facing feared situations, such as rejection, in a gradual and controlled way helps people desensitise and recover faster from setbacks. That was the idea behind my 10-day experiment. Research supports the idea that “Rejection Therapy,” a practice of intentionally seeking out small rejections (e.g., making improbable requests to strangers), can boost resilience and self-confidence by normalising the experience and removing the stigma or personal shame associated with being turned down. Psychologists recommend starting small, increasing ‘stakes’ over time, and employing self-compassion practices during recovery. Meditation and reframing negative self-talk are also important strategies to maintain self-esteem during the process.
.png)
Why traditional advice fails
Traditional advice treats rejection as something to ignore or endure. It ignores the nervous system entirely. Your brain doesn't care about your grit. It's running ancient software designed to keep you safe from exile. You can't logic your way out of a biological alarm system. You have to train it.
"Don't take it personally" advice fails because rejection IS personal from your point of view. When someone says no to your work, they're rejecting something you created, something that came from you. Pretending otherwise doesn't build resilience. It kills honest reflection.
A hundred bad pitches don't make you better. They make you ‘practiced’ at bad pitches. One pitch, followed by honest feedback, followed by one meaningful adjustment - that's growth.
"Toughen up" confuses endurance with progress.
Grit without iteration just extends the pain curve. You're not getting stronger, you're getting numb.
What actually works is reiteration: reflection + adjustment + another attempt.
.png)
Acknowledge the stingRaw repetition without learning is wasted motion. What compounds isn't volume. It's deliberate refinement.
When someone says NO to your work, they're rejecting something you created, something that came from you. Pretending otherwise doesn't build resilience. It kills honest reflection.
The founder who can't acknowledge the sting also can't extract the signal. You need to feel it to decode it. When moderate, rather than severe, rejection experiences are repeated in a safe setting, some individuals show milder emotional reactions and more adaptive social behaviours over time.
Most research and therapeutic guidelines show that controlled, repeated exposure to rejection is much more likely to produce habituation than sensitisation, provided it is done in a supportive and gradual manner.
The right move isn't denial. It's separation: acknowledge the hurt, analyse the feedback, adjust, and move again.
.png)
Can rejection be trained like a muscle?Exposure therapy techniques show that facing feared situations, such as rejection, in a gradual and controlled way helps people desensitise and recover faster from setbacks. That was the idea behind my 10-day experiment. Research supports the idea that “Rejection Therapy,” a practice of intentionally seeking out small rejections (e.g., making improbable requests to strangers), can boost resilience and self-confidence by normalising the experience and removing the stigma or personal shame associated with being turned down. Psychologists recommend starting small, increasing ‘stakes’ over time, and employing self-compassion practices during recovery. Meditation and reframing negative self-talk are also important strategies to maintain self-esteem during the process.
.png)
Why traditional advice fails
Traditional advice treats rejection as something to ignore or endure. It ignores the nervous system entirely. Your brain doesn't care about your grit. It's running ancient software designed to keep you safe from exile. You can't logic your way out of a biological alarm system. You have to train it.
"Don't take it personally" advice fails because rejection IS personal from your point of view. When someone says no to your work, they're rejecting something you created, something that came from you. Pretending otherwise doesn't build resilience. It kills honest reflection.
A hundred bad pitches don't make you better. They make you ‘practiced’ at bad pitches. One pitch, followed by honest feedback, followed by one meaningful adjustment - that's growth.
"Toughen up" confuses endurance with progress.
Grit without iteration just extends the pain curve. You're not getting stronger, you're getting numb.
What actually works is reiteration: reflection + adjustment + another attempt.
.png)
Acknowledge the stingRaw repetition without learning is wasted motion. What compounds isn't volume. It's deliberate refinement.
When someone says NO to your work, they're rejecting something you created, something that came from you. Pretending otherwise doesn't build resilience. It kills honest reflection.
The founder who can't acknowledge the sting also can't extract the signal. You need to feel it to decode it. When moderate, rather than severe, rejection experiences are repeated in a safe setting, some individuals show milder emotional reactions and more adaptive social behaviours over time.
Most research and therapeutic guidelines show that controlled, repeated exposure to rejection is much more likely to produce habituation than sensitisation, provided it is done in a supportive and gradual manner.
The right move isn't denial. It's separation: acknowledge the hurt, analyse the feedback, adjust, and move again.
Your job is to craft the best pitch you can. To make the boldest ask.
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Whether they say yes or no? That's not in your control. The moment you detach from needing the "yes," rejection loses its power. You're anchored in the action itself - the only thing you ever truly controlled. But, detachment isn't indifference. It's freedom.
Rejection is a trainable skill, not in the sense of "toughen up," but in the sense of exposure therapy. The more low-stakes ‘NOs’ you experience, the less threatening high-stakes ‘NOs’ become. Your nervous system learns: "I survived that. It wasn't fatal. I'm still here."
How to practice:The goal isn't success. It's normalising the sensation of rejection so your brain stops treating it like a crisis.
Most founders take rejection as a verdict.
Elite founders treat it as a data point.
The difference is everything.
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"What's the actual feedback here?"Separate the data from the drama:Data: "The VC passed."
Drama: "I'm not good enough. My idea is terrible. I'll never raise."
The VC didn't reject you. He passed on this pitch, at this stage, through his specific thesis.
That's feedback, not judgment.
The shift:
Stop asking: "Why don't they like me?"
Start asking: "What can I learn from this?"
You're no longer the victim. You're the researcher.
The Bhagavad Gita teaches a concept that obliterates the fear of rejection:
You control the effort. Not the result.
You control the pitch. Not the decision.
You control the ask. Not the answer.
Krishna tells Arjuna on the battlefield:"You have a right to perform your prescribed duties, but you are not entitled to the fruits of your actions."
Your job is to craft the best pitch you can. To make the boldest ask.
.png)
Whether they say yes or no? That's not in your control. The moment you detach from needing the "yes," rejection loses its power. You're anchored in the action itself - the only thing you ever truly controlled. But, detachment isn't indifference. It's freedom.
Rejection is a trainable skill, not in the sense of "toughen up," but in the sense of exposure therapy. The more low-stakes ‘NOs’ you experience, the less threatening high-stakes ‘NOs’ become. Your nervous system learns: "I survived that. It wasn't fatal. I'm still here."
How to practice:The goal isn't success. It's normalising the sensation of rejection so your brain stops treating it like a crisis.
Most founders take rejection as a verdict.
Elite founders treat it as a data point.
The difference is everything.
.png)
"What's the actual feedback here?"Separate the data from the drama:Data: "The VC passed."
Drama: "I'm not good enough. My idea is terrible. I'll never raise."
The VC didn't reject you. He passed on this pitch, at this stage, through his specific thesis.
That's feedback, not judgment.
.png)
"What's the actual feedback here?"Separate the data from the drama:Data: "The VC passed."
Drama: "I'm not good enough. My idea is terrible. I'll never raise."
The VC didn't reject you. He passed on this pitch, at this stage, through his specific thesis.
That's feedback, not judgment.
The shift:
Stop asking: "Why don't they like me?"
Start asking: "What can I learn from this?"
You're no longer the victim. You're the researcher.
The Bhagavad Gita teaches a concept that obliterates the fear of rejection:
You control the effort. Not the result.
You control the pitch. Not the decision.
You control the ask. Not the answer.
Krishna tells Arjuna on the battlefield:"You have a right to perform your prescribed duties, but you are not entitled to the fruits of your actions."
Here's the system that I built from ten days of deliberate exposure to rejection.
Rejection is a trainable skill, not in the sense of "toughen up," but in the sense of exposure therapy. The more low-stakes ‘NOs’ you experience, the less threatening high-stakes ‘NOs’ become. Your nervous system learns: "I survived that. It wasn't fatal. I'm still here."
How to practice:The goal isn't success. It's normalising the sensation of rejection so your brain stops treating it like a crisis.
Most founders take rejection as a verdict.
Elite founders treat it as a data point.
The difference is everything.
.png)
"What's the actual feedback here?"Separate the data from the drama:Data: "The VC passed."
Drama: "I'm not good enough. My idea is terrible. I'll never raise."
The VC didn't reject you. He passed on this pitch, at this stage, through his specific thesis.
That's feedback, not judgment.
The shift:
Stop asking: "Why don't they like me?"
Start asking: "What can I learn from this?"
You're no longer the victim. You're the researcher.
The Bhagavad Gita teaches a concept that obliterates the fear of rejection:
You control the effort. Not the result.
You control the pitch. Not the decision.
You control the ask. Not the answer.
Krishna tells Arjuna on the battlefield:"You have a right to perform your prescribed duties, but you are not entitled to the fruits of your actions."
Your job is to craft the best pitch you can. To make the boldest ask.
.png)
Whether they say yes or no? That's not in your control. The moment you detach from needing the "yes," rejection loses its power. You're anchored in the action itself - the only thing you ever truly controlled. But, detachment isn't indifference. It's freedom.
Here's what I know now that I didn't before the experiment:
Here's what I know now that I didn't before the experiment:
The best founders don't feel rejection less.They've just trained their recovery system to metabolise the hurt caused by rejection faster. While most founders burn three days replaying a single VC pass, the best ones process it in 30 minutes and move. Not because they're tougher. Because they've built a system that turns ‘NO’ into data before their ego turns it into drama.
The ones who win aren't avoiding rejection.They're the ones who've learned to move through it faster than everyone else. Train for ‘NOs’. Treat rejection as data. Practice detachment.
Accept the inevitability of some rejection, especially when pursuing ambitious goals.
Experiencing and learning from rejection can, over time, strengthen psychological resilience, boost self-worth, and reinforce belonging, if approached as a skill that can be ‘trained’ with mindful exposure and robust self-care practices.
adapt, and strengthen personal coping skills. Each episode is a chance to reassess, grow, and build inner strength.