In this episode, I share the deeply personal story of the day I quit my corporate job and truly began my entrepreneurial journey.
From the outside, it looked like I had built a great life. I had climbed quickly in the insurance world, negotiated perks most people at my age and experience level didn’t have, and built a version of success that looked impressive on paper. But underneath all of that, I was burned out, depressed, and completely disconnected from the life I was living.
I talk about how I moved up the corporate ladder so quickly, why I was always frustrated by inefficiency and rigid systems, and how those same instincts eventually pointed me toward entrepreneurship. I also open up about the breaking point — the panic attack I had sitting in my office parking lot — and the moment I knew I could not walk back into that job and keep pretending everything was fine.
This is a raw and honest episode about misalignment, burnout, identity, and what it feels like when you finally choose yourself, even when the decision doesn’t make sense to everyone around you.
In this episode, I talk about:
- How I got into the corporate insurance world and moved up quickly
- Why being a top performer often created more frustration than reward
- The inefficiencies and rigid systems that made me question everything
- What my life looked like on paper versus how it actually felt
- The panic attack that became my breaking point
- The conversations I had with my family before quitting
- Why I quit without having the next step fully figured out
- How that moment became the true beginning of my entrepreneurial journey
Key takeaways
Success on paper doesn’t always mean fulfillment in real life.
I had a lot of the things people are told to want, but I still felt completely miserable.
Entrepreneurial instincts often show up long before the business does.
Even before I started my own path, I was already questioning broken systems, pushing for efficiency, and resisting the way things had always been done.
Burnout can build quietly until it hits all at once.
What seemed like just another normal workday turned into the moment everything I had been suppressing came to the surface.
The “responsible” answer isn’t always the right one.
The people around me thought I should wait until I had another job lined up, but I knew I had reached the point where I couldn’t stay another day.
Peace can come right after a hard decision.
Even though quitting created uncertainty, I felt immediate relief. I knew I had made the right choice for me.