I was an ambitious teen-ager. I later became an ambitious adult.
I wanted power and material success, but more than anything else, I wanted approval. I wanted praise. I needed people to be impressed with what I did and with what I achieved.
By the time I was about 15 or 16 years old, I wanted to be president of the United States. That wasn’t just an idle daydream. I had a written plan for each step of the way. John F. Kennedy had become president at the age of 43. My goal was to beat that — to become president even younger.
In my 20s, I wanted to build a media empire. No matter where I worked in the newspaper business, my mind was looking ahead to the day when I would own a massive media conglomerate — newspapers, television, movies and more.
The truth is that I didn’t want any of these things. Although I enjoyed publishing newspapers, I didn’t want to run a big business. And I didn’t want to do the deals and fundraising that would get me somewhere powerful as a politician.
I just wanted praise. I wanted applause. My ego was begging for approval.

I’m trying to do something new — and I don’t know what to call it
Conflict pushes inner buttons to make me feel like child in trouble
Goodbye, Daddy
Forget your partner’s best traits; worst traits predict your future
Industrial age relic: Do companies pay for your time or your brain?
‘Vast military-industrial complex’ keeps growing and keeps killing
Do great dreams really come true or do they just serve to haunt us?
We can’t agree what intelligence is, but it defines some of us