A founder sells the business. An executive cashes out a position. A long-held holding goes public. The numbers in your account change by an order of magnitude, sometimes overnight.
The financial side gets immediate attention. Advisors, attorneys, and family office professionals organize around the new resources. Everyone celebrates.
And then a quieter difficulty often begins. The thing that organized your daily life is over. The building, the leadership, the years of effort that gave each day its shape — finished. The conventional measures of success have been achieved, and the person who reached for them no longer has anything to reach for.
the quiet difficulty of completion (the real loss that comes with even desired endings, often unnamed), identity beyond the doing (who you are when you’re no longer the founder, the executive, the builder), the expectations of others (what family, friends, advisors, and the broader culture are now assuming about you), purpose and direction now (what calls forward when the conventional script doesn’t fit), and the relationship with the new wealth itself.
The order is responsive. We move through whichever territory is most alive on a given day.
You’ve had ambition your whole life. Retirement doesn’t erase that—it just requires you to aim it differently.
They’re usually still active in their working years, often in their forties through sixties, and they’re oriented toward purpose and engagement in ways that don’t fit the conventional retirement framework.
The work also serves people preparing for an event they can see coming — founders approaching a sale, executives nearing the end of a vesting cycle, anyone who knows the transition is on the horizon. Work done before the event often makes the transition itself less disorienting.
They often arrive saying: “Everyone keeps congratulating me and I feel worse than I did before.”
Letting go is hard because it mattered.
A conversation begins with a complimentary 30-minute exploratory call.