Entrepreneur Plus - Short White
For Subscribers

How Feeling Excluded as a Child Drove this Entrepreneur to Start Her Own CompanyAmanda Ealla's own childhood experiences of feeling like she didn't belong drove her to start ISH Dolls. Here are three lessons she's picked up on the journey of starting her own business.

ByMita MallickOriginally published

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Itsy Bitsy Memories Photography

I remember having classmates over for a playdate once in elementary school. My friend walked by my parents' room and peeked in. "What are those funny looking dolls? Why are there flowers in front of them? Why is there smoke burning from that stick?"

I explained that it was my mother's prayer area. As a Hindu, my mother prayed every evening after bathing, offering flowers and lighting incense. And those were not dolls; they were our Hindu gods.

"You pray to a statue with an elephant head?" she laughed. Our prayer area later became the talk of my second-grade classroom. The other kids just couldn't understand why we prayed "like that."

This is a subscriber-only article. Join Entrepreneur+today for access

Related Topics

Business News

'Not Much Financial Education' — Yet Millennials Have Boomers and Gen X Beat When It Comes to Retirement Savings. Here's Why.

千禧一代小姐ght own fewer homes and make less money — but they're on track for a better retirement.

Business News

Two of Amazon's Most Popular Prime Features Might Actually Be Illegal

Among the practices under scrutiny by the FTC are Amazon's "Buy Now" button and the shipping component of Prime.

Business News

The AI Job Market Is Surging and Paying Up to $300K a Year. Here's How to Snag a Role.

According to a new LinkedIn report, AI jobs can be found in a wide range of fields.

Business News

'Earth Shaking News': Fans Rejoice Over the Return of 'Retired' McDonald's Cult-Favorite Item

The McRib last appeared on menus in 2022 during the company's self-proclaimed "farewell tour" for the sandwich.

Business News

You Can Now Have an Uber Driver Ship Pre-Paid Packages to UPS, FedEx for a $5 Flat Fee

Rejoice, lazy returners of the online shopping world.