Grit

What really is grit?

I’ve been in the startup/innovation ecosystem for a bit now, and I’ve been fortunate to study, observe, and embody what I believe is the most important trait to do great things: grit.

Grit manifests from singular focus, passion, and the ability to reach towards the edge of the possible. We often mistake it for adjacent qualities like ambition, confidence, success, or privilege. Those can help, and they often reinforce each other, but grit sits in a separate category. It shows up most clearly when none of the external signals are reassuring and you keep going anyway.

In my experience, grit is built from three elements:

  • Uncompromising conviction in the mission you choose to pursue
  • High agency to carve out your own path, because no one will do it for you
  • Personal accountability to own outcomes and define hard success and failure

Uncompromising conviction

This is something I saw early on at Gordian and in the longevity space. There are many people on the bandwagon now, or those who speak more nonsense than truth, but Martin (CSO, Gordian) was one of the few that embodied the field’s ambitions and always sprinted towards them. The eventual goal for geroscientists, after curing all disease, is to extend lifespan. But to do that, you need a clinical trial for aging. To do that, the FDA has to designate aging as a disease. This calls for systems-level change that will define this century, and I think it’s uniquely possible because of people like him. It requires a coalition built over many years.

This sort of uncompromising conviction is something you embody, and probably one of those things that’s less impactful to write out. Alas, I’ll try:

Conviction comes with competence and confidence that you are uniquely able to bend entropy in your favour, no matter the time scale or resources required. Time, networks, money—these are tools for leverage. “Tokens” you “cash in” when needed, and you often do, because if it was easy someone else would’ve done it by now. Conviction becomes uncompromising when you’re inevitably given an out.

High agency

This phrase gets thrown around too much now. But just a few years ago, the people who embody it truly changed how I perceive what’s possible in this life.

We’re all human. No matter how much money we raise or how many lawyers we’re armed with, we’re all just hyper-evolved lizard brains trying to predict and build the future we semi-selfishly want. The “you can just do things” slogan is cringe mostly because ego inevitably gets in the way when we’re suddenly given money, power, influence (on Twitter) with a startup. “You can just” blow an $8 billion hole in your balance sheet and spend other people’s crypto money on parties in the Bahamas. “You can just” burn your investor’s money on fire, leasing out co-working spaces while haemorrhaging cash until the SEC exposes you. But just as you can do that, you can also recover from heroin addiction and lead one of the most well-endowed philanthropic funds in California.

Fittingly, she’s since left Astera and is writing a book about agency, out in 2026.

Personal accountability

This is the most undervalued trait, precisely because it can’t be measured externally. You can screw people over (investors, friends, family, etc.) and retroactively justify that you were “doing it for the mission” or “keeping yourself/the company accountable.” At the end of the day, no one knows the truth but you.

In the startup/innovation context, the most obvious examples are when founders step down, executives transition out, or companies/projects are spun down. We’re not often taught or encouraged to quit correctly. Companies drag on for ages—either by the founder thugging it out even though we all know it won’t work, or by sending a doomed clinical asset forward despite the entire company being laid off, with the product sponsor operating like a shell company.

Biotech often doesn’t have a clear playbook, and there’s real value in that. But it also makes it hard to see the path forward. This is especially true in the metascience space, where initiatives are built upon a seemingly bottomless stack of experiments.

Henry is one of those people currently navigating the metascience biotech space. He’s been leading the first FRO, Cultivarium, for four years. Cultivarium is a microbial infrastructure project that builds tools for the 99% of microbes we can’t work with in the lab. In theory, finding bacteria that duplicate every 2 minutes instead of 20 will have massive impact on the pace of science. New microbes can help us terraform Mars, build concrete from dirt, chew away plastic destroying our oceans, in situ. But it’s not the first time humanity had these ideas, and past failures are now precedent.

Non-model microbe research is very, very difficult to commercialize. Up until now, commercialization paths have been things like biofuels, scientific tools, and bio-fabrication. These are all impossibly difficult to scale. FRCs are therefore the most realistic path for organisations like Cultivarium—but difficult nonetheless.

Henry’s conviction is uncompromising, infectious, rational, and personal. When I asked why he started Cultivarium, he said it was because one day when the aliens come and ask for the microbiology expert on earth, he wanted to be the one nominated. I couldn’t tell how serious he was, but I thought that was a pretty cool goal. Henry is a lot of things, but he’s certainly a guy with grit. 

Martin, Cate, and Henry are just a few of the people I’ve been fortunate to learn immensely from. Seek them out. Better yet, become one of them. I’ll do it. Will you?