Send us Fan Mail When you compete on a global stage for Entrepreneur of the Year and lose to Narayana Murthy, you don’t just come back with a trophy or a ranking - you come back with perspective. That experience shaped how Pàdraig O Céidigh thinks about entrepreneurship, success, and life. What struck him most was not business scale or wealth, but Murthy’s humility, spirituality, discipline, and belief in helping other people grow. It raised a bigger question: What actually makes a great entrepreneur and more importantly, what makes a great life? This conversation is less about building companies and more about building a life of purpose, awareness, resilience, and good decisions. Pàdraig shares how he grew up in a working-class family where two values shaped everything he later became: hard work and integrity. Over time he became an accountant, lawyer, airline founder, entrepreneur of the year, senator, professor, and author - but he emphasizes that titles and success are not the most important things. The real lessons came from failure, setbacks, stress, betrayal, and difficult decisions. One of his strongest beliefs is that the biggest waste of time in life is feeling sorry for yourself. Entrepreneurs fall off the horse many times - the difference is that they get back on again. One idea that deeply influenced him came from Harvard Business School, where a professor asked a question he never forgot: “What is the world with you versus the world without you?” He believes this is not just a business strategy question - it is a life question. Each person should try to leave the world better than they found it. The conversation then moves into wisdom and decision-making. After running an airline for 26 years with hundreds of flights per week and no accidents, he realized something important: the quality of your life is largely the quality of your decisions. This realization eventually led him to write The Purposeful Decision Maker. Another major theme is the difference between success and happiness. Many successful people are not happy, and many happy people are not successful by society’s definition. Happiness, he argues, comes from gratitude, contentment, awareness, and not comparing yourself to others. He also shares one of the hardest lessons of his life: business problems rarely broke him — people he trusted who betrayed him caused the most stress and nearly cost him his life. If he could advise his younger self, he would learn earlier how to recognize difficult people and avoid them. Overall, this conversation is really about awareness, resilience, decision-making, success vs happiness, and living a purposeful life - not just building businesses, but building a meaningful life. Here are the Top 10 Takeaways from the conversation: Losing to great people teaches you more than winning. Hard work and integrity are long-term advantages. Failure is inevitable - self-pity is optional. The most important education is understanding yourself. Ask yourself: What is the world with me versus the world without me? Decision-making is one of the most important skills in life. Success and happiness are not the same thing. Gratitude and contentment matter more than comparison. People problems are often harder than business problems. Awareness is the foundation of wisdom. Books: Give and Take Snakes in Suits