12/30/2025
When my investors pulled back, my first thought wasn’t about money.
It was: I let everyone down.
They had put me in $2.2M in debt, then refused to actually fund the company.
I wanted to fight. I tried to fix it; but instead, my attorney sat me down and told me the truth I didn’t want to hear:
“If you stay, you risk jail for illegal activity happening under your watch—activity you can’t stop.”
So I had to walk away.
Not because I wanted to quit. But staying would’ve destroyed my family and my future and possibly sent me to jail.
For about six months, I stalled.
Not strategizing. Not “pivoting.”
Just trying to figure out who I was without the company and how to move forward.
Eventually, I did the only thing I could:
I started selling lighting again.
I went back to school and earned my MBA.
I rebuilt, this time with better filters, looking for better partners and better boundaries.
I got my MBA for two reasons:
I never wanted to be powerless in an investor room again, and I never wanted to be stuck with bottom-of-the-barrel investors again.
Here’s the lesson I learned the hard way:
Resilience doesn’t look like resilience in the moment.
It looks like surviving the day.
If you’re a founder in a season where progress feels invisible and shame feels loud, you’re not failing. You’re enduring.
I wrote about this—and the scars behind it—in my book,
Fail Big: Lessons From a Battle-Scarred Entrepreneur.
Founder to founder: if you’re in it right now, this book is for you.
You can find it on Amazon.
You’re not alone. And this isn’t the end.