You're in your car in the parking garage at 7pm, summoning the energy to walk into your house and perform a version of yourself that has nothing left in the tank. The team can't make a call without you. Production incidents go directly to your phone. You haven't taken real PTO in two years.
And the worst part: you actually believe it. You believe the org collapses if you're not there to catch it.
That belief isn't your superpower. It's a script. And it's been running the same loop for fifteen years.
You've said some version of all of this. The script says it for you.
"I'll delegate once I get through this sprint. I just need to get us stable first."
"Nobody on my team has the context I have. It's faster if I just do it."
"I can't go dark on PTO. The board would panic. The team would spiral."
"If I step away, it all burns down."
The loop isn't a capacity problem. It's not a delegation problem. It's not a hiring problem. It's a pattern that's been running since before you were an executive. It got you here by being incredibly useful. Right up until it started destroying everything.
"If I step away, it all burns down."
What you think this is: Conscientiousness. Accountability. Leadership. You care more than anyone else in the room, so you stay.
What this actually is: A survival pattern running on hardware that was built before you had this title. It trades your nervous system, your relationships, and eventually your career for the feeling of being indispensable.
What it costs the org: Every decision that routes through you is a bottleneck. Every direct report who sees you in every fire learns they are not trusted. The documentation that doesn't exist because you are the documentation. The bus factor of one that keeps your board up at night. That's you. You built it.
Not because you stopped caring. Because you rewrote the script that made caring mean being everywhere.
| // The Pattern Running Now | // 90 Days After the Rewrite |
|---|---|
| You debug production incidents at 11pm because it's faster than explaining context you haven't written down. | Production incidents route to the on-call rotation. You see the postmortem the next morning. |
| You cancel PTO because the launch is "this month." Like it always is. | You take the PTO. You don't check Slack. The launch goes fine without your eyes on it every hour. |
| You walk into the board meeting carrying the weight of everything that could go wrong and performing calm. | You walk into the board meeting calm. Not performed calm. The kind that comes from a team that makes decisions without you. |
| The two senior engineers who could carry this load have started interviewing elsewhere because you keep solving problems before they can. | The senior engineers stay. Because they're growing. Because you got out of the way. |
| You know the script is a problem. You've known for years. You just can't stop running it. | You know the script by name. You see it coming before it runs you. You have a language that stops it. |
Your superpower metastasized. We rewrite the loop, not the talent.
The Rewrite doesn't tear out the competence, the pattern recognition, the drive that got you here. It cuts the script loose from it. You keep the talent. You stop letting the script run the calendar.
"I was deliberately sabotaging when I'd get close to big successes, slowing my progress unconsciously. Then I went all in.
In the past I'd have questioned myself. I no longer question.
I've hired many coaches over the years and spent close to $100,000. Jeremy is my highest-paid coach, and the only one who's 10X'd his fee."
Jodi · CPA
Different industry. But Jodi was running the same script you are. The rewrite works the language, not the title.
"Let's talk about your Q3 strategic priorities."
Your strategy is fine. It's the script underneath the strategy that's building a single point of failure every day. Strategy frameworks don't reach the language running at 11pm when the Slack notification comes in.
"High Output Management. Delegate. Build trust. Ship the book report to your team."
You've read the books. You know delegation is the answer. The script doesn't care that you know. It runs anyway.
"I'll take three weeks off and come back reset."
The script is still installed when you come back. The sabbatical pauses it. The Rewrite removes it.
Not hypothetically. This is the actuarial table for the pattern you're running. You already know what it looks like. You've seen it in someone else.
The two people who actually understand your systems are already interviewing. You know this because you are the reason they haven't grown. When they leave, the institutional knowledge walks out with them. Not backed up. Not documented. Gone.
There is a board meeting in your future where you cannot answer a question because the person who knew the answer gave notice last Tuesday. The investor who starts asking uncomfortable questions in that meeting is not wrong. Your org is ninety days from collapse at any given moment. That is what you built by making yourself irreplaceable.
Your partner stopped having the conversation about this. Not because they gave up caring. Because they've already had it forty times and they know how it ends. You promise things will change after the current crunch. The crunch never ends. They adapted to a version of you that is not fully present, and they stopped expecting anything different.
Your kid stopped asking you to come to things. Not dramatically. Quietly. One rescheduled game, one missed dinner, one "I'll be there" that wasn't. They filed you under "probably not coming" and moved on. The window for that to be different is shorter than you think.
You have been running on cortisol and bad coffee for years. The blood pressure number has been quietly wrong for two years. You know this because you saw it at the last physical you rescheduled twice. The sleep that doesn't come. The resting heart rate that isn't resting. The weight you keep meaning to address after this quarter.
The executive who had the heart attack at 51 on a Sunday afternoon was not unlucky. He was predictable. He had been running the same pattern for fifteen years and the body eventually stopped absorbing the cost. The doctor who sees your chart is not surprised. You might be.
None of this is a worst-case scenario. It is the default outcome of the pattern you are running if nothing changes.
The question is not whether it ends here. The question is whether you address it before it forces the conversation.
The 90-Day Rewrite is 1:1. Six clients at a time. If there's a spot, there's a spot. If there isn't, there's a waitlist. The application takes four minutes. I reply within 48 hours.
The program is built for the version of you that's been meaning to fix this for three years and keeps waiting until after the current crunch settles down.
The crunch never settles down. That's the script.
Apply. We'll find out in the first call whether the Rewrite is the right tool for your specific script.