All the work built my fame and certainly made me more money, but the toll it took in my home was not good.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
It's not about the fame and the money because if you do good work all that stuff comes.
At a certain point, if you work really hard and you get good and people like your work, you do deserve the fame - but you shouldn't take it for granted.
I have continued to work at different things, and rebuilt my home all by myself. I did it for the sake of satisfaction at doing something. I did it because I happened to be where I was.
I built a great company, one of the - some of the most iconic assets in the world, $10 billion of net worth, more than $10 billion of net worth, and frankly, I had a great time doing it.
I love the fame and the money and the power. You have to keep working to have that.
I certainly feel my career was a great career because it inspired so many many people, literally hundreds of people to follow a new kind of life and to realize that they could make out and advance their own professional and private and social lives.
There are lots of things I could have done for the money, but I've made a great living doing the things I want to do.
I think fame became exciting for me in the late '90s because I could actually use it as a means to an end. I could actually have it help me serve my vocationfulness.
Money and fame made me believe I was entitled. I was wrong and foolish.
I made enough money to buy a house. That's crazy, but fame proved ephemeral.