Dear Monday
Dear Monday is a podcast about the decisions that change the shape of your life. Most people talk about opportunity in terms of upside — growth, freedom, financial potential. But far fewer conversations sit with what lives underneath those decisions: the obligations, the constraints, the commitments that are difficult to unwind once they're made.
This show exists in that space.
Each episode explores the realities behind ownership — business ownership, franchise investment, career exits, and other high-stakes commitments that reshape financial and personal life.
I spent years inside franchise ownership and deal advisory — walking prospective owners through the discovery process and watching how the industry was designed to move people toward decisions, not through them. Dear Monday is what I built for the moment in between.
The conversations are reflective, structured, and grounded in one principle: Clarity before commitment.
Rather than motivation or hype, Dear Monday offers disciplined thinking about risk, responsibility, and the long arc of a decision. The kind of thinking that belongs in the room before a contract is signed.
Because once it is — the real work begins.
Dear Monday
S2E7 Clarity Before Commitment: How Do You Know When You’ve Waited Too Long?
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There is a version of waiting that is responsible.
The timeline is moving. Real things are accumulating — runway, readiness, a foundation for what comes next. The plan is being built. The condition is specific and the endpoint is real.
And there is a version of waiting that becomes the risk.
It looks identical from the outside. Same logic. Same language. Same legitimacy. But the endpoint keeps moving. The condition is always almost met.
In this episode, TuRhonda Freeman names the difference — and asks the question that most people in this position have never been asked directly.
“Are you still being patient — or are you avoiding the irreversible?”
If you’re planning a career exit — if you’ve been quietly building the off-ramp, running the numbers, waiting for the right moment — this episode is for you.
Because the exit is a one-way door. And the longer the wait, the more important it is to know which kind of waiting you’re doing.
In This Episode
- The two versions of waiting — and why they look identical until they don’t
- The irreversibility question: what it means that the exit is a one-way door, and how to tell if the conditions are moving to keep pace with the door getting closer
- For the person planning a corporate exit: the three things the extended timeline is actually costing — beyond the income gap
- The window cost: why the terms of your exit are negotiable now, and what changes when they’re not
- The financial opportunity cost that doesn’t show up in a paycheck — and why it’s easy not to count
- The identity cost: what it means to become a beginner again, and whether you have the appetite for the phase that comes immediately after you leave
- A four-question diagnostic — and why you only need one to land
- “At some point, the timeline stops being something that happens to you. And becomes something you choose.”
Key Quotes
“There is a version of waiting that is responsible. And there is a version of waiting that becomes the risk.”
“Are you still being patient — or are you avoiding the irreversible?”
“The exit is a one-way door. When you walk through it — the title, the income, the institutional credibility, the structure that organized how you moved through the world — that version of your life is gone. Not paused. Gone.”
“Can you tolerate becoming a beginner again? Not in theory. In practice.”
This Week’s Question
Is the patience still serving the plan — or has it started serving the weight of the door?
Work With TuRhonda
This episode asks the question. The Decision Exposure Review is the conversation that examines the answer — specifically, for your exit, in your current position.
Not to validate the timing. To look at what the exit actually exposes on its current terms.
The real financial gap. The window that’s available right now and what it looks like when it narrows. The conditions that need to be true for the exit to be structurally sound — and what changes if those conditions aren’t in place when you move.
If you’re planning a corporate exit — or any significant career or ownership transition — this is the conversation that belongs before the decision is irreversible. Not after.
Independently. Without a stake in whether you go forward.
Before the exit. When the thinking still belongs entirely to you.
Learn more about the advisory work behind this show: DearMonday.co
About The Dear Monday Podcast
Dear Monday is a podcast about the decisions that change the shape of your life. Each episode explores the realities behind ownership — franchise investment, business ownership, career exits, and other high-stakes commitments that reshape financial and personal life.