Several years ago, the company (as it periodically did) brought in a new division manager. By the third year, company market share had fallen dramatically and, due to some poor management decisions, the division began to lose money. To my great surprise, the division manager convinced his superiors that my friend was the problem, and he was summarily fired. His prior decade-plus of outstanding performance meant little when the chips were down.
An entrepreneur friend of mine said: "I decided that the safest thing I could do with my career was to invest in myself. I know my work ethic. I know my integrity. I know my ability to make good decisions. I feel safer investing my time, energy and talent in my own venture than I ever would working for somebody else."
In other words, he chose to be an entrepreneur in large measure because he wanted to avoid risk, not because he wanted to embrace it.
We can't completely avoid risk in our lives. Every time we drive a car, there is inherent risk as we make decisions about where we will go and how fast we will drive to get there. But despite the risks, few of us choose not to go. Similarly, smart entrepreneurs take reasonable and calculated risks where the benefits are likely to outweigh the inevitable risks.
If our goal in life is to avoid every potential problem, we will never experience real success. Almost every significant advance in society happened because somebody was willing to take a reasonable risk. There is a spirit of entrepreneurialism every time something new and bold and untested is undertaken. And even when our calculations are wrong and that snake bites us, we've accomplished something because hopefully we've learned something.
Whether or not we love taking the risk.