Going through a rough patch at work? Well, at least you probably didn’t get ousted as CEO of your own company, watch two of your companies hover on the brink of bankruptcy or get fired while on your honeymoon.

All of those things have happened at various points to Elon Musk, founder of SpaceX, co-founder of Tesla TSLA, +4.42% , founder of Neuralink, co-founder of SolarCity and co-founder of X.com which eventually became PayPal , and who now has a net worth of about $15 billion.

Musk’s impressive resume is littered with accomplishments, but it’s worth remembering it’s not all sunbeams and soaring stock prices.

Just this week, Tesla blamed “production bottlenecks” for having made only a fraction of the promised 1,500 Model 3s, according to The Wall Street Journal. Major portions of the car were being made by hand rather than on a production line because the automated production line wasn’t ready to use yet -- something highly unusual for automobile production.

Here’s a history of his notable failures and setbacks, as compiled in a massive infographic from Kickresume.

In 2000, Musk almost died after contracting malaria while traveling to Brazil and his homeland South Africa. His take on the incident? “Vacation will kill you.”

First rocket launch.... first explosion:

It seems like most of us would have given up right around here, after Tesla dealt with issues around both crash-related battery fires and even cases around spontaneous combustion.

But he didn’t give up, which leads us to:

Though, a SpaceX spokesperson told MarketWatch that the company doesn’t consider the 2015 explosions as failures, but rather experimental landings, since they provided critical data that has subsequently allowed to land a number of first stages. He also said the “4th, 5th and 6th critical failures” were not failures at all, as they were successful in their intent to deliver their payloads to orbit and that the landings were intended to be experimental.

Some more recent setbacks for Musk have included a surprise downgrade for Tesla from Morgan Stanley, Consumer Reports lowering its ratings on the Mlodel S and Model X, and bad press over allegations that Tesla assembly line employees were working in brutal working conditions. Another study found that the Tesla factory has had higher injury rates than the industry average.

Related: The fascinating life of Elon Musk, captured in one giant infographic

Musk is by no means the only entrepreneur who has met with epic failures along the road to success.

Walt Disney was fired from a newspaper for “not being creative enough” and founded a film studio that went bankrupt before moving to Los Angeles with just $40. Jeff Bezos could become the richest person in the world soon, but admits “I’ve made billions of dollars of failures at Amazon.com.” Steve Jobs was famously ousted from Apple in 1985 and later said of that time, “I was a very public failure.” Steven Spielberg was rejected from the University of Southern California’s film school twice, and Oprah Winfrey was fired from her first television job as an anchor.

“I think it’s important to have a good hard failure when you’re young because it makes you kind of aware of what can happen to you,” Disney once said. “Because of it I’ve never had any fear in my whole life when we’ve been near collapse.”