The Marble and the Monsoon
A few years ago, I lived in India. The economist Joan Robinson once said, “Whatever you can rightly say about India, the opposite is also true.” I didn’t fully understand that until I lived it.
My family lived in a beautiful, top-floor, 2,500-square-foot apartment with marble floors, three porches, and a rooftop garden area. It was serene. But just outside our gate? Pure chaos. No sidewalks, crumbling infrastructure, 100% humidity and unrelating heat, overwhelming smells, and a constant gridlock of motorcycles, pedestrians, and the occasional cow. Then there was the yearly monsoon season, leaving the streets under three feet of water.
It was luxury AND chaos. Charm AND frustration. I loved it, AND I wanted to run.
As an early-stage COO or operational leader in a sub-$5M company, you live in that exact same paradox. You’re expected to keep the “Marble Floor” of the business polished—the KPIs, the board decks, the long-term vision—while wading through the “Monsoon” of the day-to-day: the Slack pings, the broken SOPs, the CEO’s latest idea tornado.
Real Talk: Most COOs burn out because they try to “fix” the monsoon. You can’t. Your job isn’t to stop the rain; it’s to build a drainage system that keeps the marble floor from flooding.
The Mantra of Anchored Leaders and the Resilient COO Leadership Mindset
When I’m stuck in the gridlock—literally, in a three-way traffic jam with a cow blocking the intersection, or figuratively, in a Slack thread with 47 unread messages—my dad’s voice rings in my head: “Control what you can, Flow with the rest.”
In the startup world, we often think our job is to control everything. We think if we can just build a better system, hire the right person, or optimize the process, we can stop the waves. But an anchor doesn’t stop the ocean from moving; it just keeps the ship from being carried away by the current.
Mastering the COO Leadership Mindset isn’t about eliminating the chaos; it’s about learning to “Flow” with it without losing your grounding.
Consider This Post: If your “Flow” is constantly interrupted by your CEO’s newest shiny objects, you might need a better system for capturing them. Check out how to use The Idea Dock to manage the “Idea Tornado” without killing creativity.
The Stockdale Paradox: Confronting Brutal Realities in Startup Ops
The Danger of False Hope: From Stockdale to Frankl
In his research for Good to Great, Jim Collins identified what he calls the Stockdale Paradox. Named after Admiral James Stockdale, who survived years as a POW, the paradox is this:
You must retain unwavering faith that you will prevail in the end, regardless of the difficulties… AND at the same time, confront the most brutal facts of your current reality, whatever they might be.
For a COO, this is the ultimate “Both/And.” You have to believe the company is going to change the world, AND you have to look at the bank account and realize you only have three months of runway left.
Stockdale noted that the people who didn’t make it out of the camps were the “optimists.” They were the ones who said, “We’ll be out by Christmas.” Christmas would come and go. Then they’d say, “We’ll be out by Easter.” Easter would come and go. They eventually died of a broken heart.
This mirrors the work of psychiatrist Viktor Frankl in Man’s Search for Meaning. Frankl observed a tragic pattern in the concentration camps: a sharp spike in deaths during the week between Christmas 1944 and New Year’s 1945. These prisoners hadn’t succumbed to a new disease or a change in rations. They died because they had pinned their entire will to live on the hope of being home by Christmas. When that hope vanished, so did their resilience.
The Lesson for the COO: If your leadership is pinned to a “date”—once we hit $1M ARR, once we hire that developer, once we get through this launch—you’re setting yourself up for heartbreak. The Anchored Leader doesn’t hope for the monsoon to end by Tuesday; they accept the monsoon as the current reality and find meaning in the work of navigating it.
Operational Grace in Action: The 48-Hour Pivot
I remember a moment when one of my companies was in dire need of investment. COVID had wiped out our biggest contracts. We were staring at the “Brutal Facts.” We had two days until a critical investor meeting.
Then, the “Idea Tornado” hit. My CEO, who had just completed an online course on pitching, decided we needed to scrap our entire pitch deck and rebuild it from scratch.
My internal reaction? FIGHT!
I knew he was probably right. The deck we had wasn’t going to land this investor. But it had taken us weeks to build. I was already at my wits’ end — managing a company, managing a family during COVID lockdowns, managing the anxiety of a bank account bleeding out. A complete turnaround in 48 hours felt unfathomable.
As someone with ADHD, emotional regulation is a constant battle. That frustration doesn’t just “feel” like anger — it is anger, visceral and immediate. It can sound condescending. It can land like a slap. And in that moment, I wanted to scream, “We don’t have time for this shit!”
So I did. I took a walk in the woods, breathed hard, and screamed. The energy inside needed to come out somewhere, and I wasn’t about to let it land on my team or my family. My stomach was in knots. My blood pressure was through the roof. I was conflicted, overwhelmed, and desperate to keep us afloat.
But then, the mantra kicked in: Flow.
Pro Tip: If your brain is stuck in a loop of “This is too much,” your body already knows. Move first. Think second. For ADHD operators, somatic regulation—walking, breathing, even screaming into the void—isn’t self-care fluff. It’s a survival skill. You can’t “think” your way out of a nervous system in overdrive.
When I came back from the woods, I didn’t apologize for the pivot. I didn’t argue about whether it was the right call. Instead, I shifted into systems mode.
We established Rules of Engagement:
- Division of Labor: My CEO owned the numbers and the narrative arc. I owned the KPIs, the data visualization, and the branding. I became the “Graphic Designer” of the vision, ensuring the story looked as solid as the data felt.
- Built-in Breaks: We walked. We breathed. We had dinners where work talk was off-limits. We protected our “Internal Anchor” so we wouldn’t burn out before the meeting even started.
Pro Tip: When an Idea Tornado hits 48 hours before a deadline, don’t argue about the “why”—at least not for too long. Instead, argue about the “who.” Immediately define the Division of Labor, so you aren’t tripping over each other in the mud.
Consider This Post: The “Who Not How” Framework for ADHD Delegation – Learn how to protect your mental energy and maintain your anchored mindset by escaping the “weeds” of daily execution.
The “Both/And” of the Ask: Why Investors Bet on Your Mindset
Brené Brown often says, “Vulnerability is the birthplace of innovation, creativity, and change.” In that pitch room, we had to be vulnerable enough to admit we were pivoting under pressure, but disciplined enough to show we had the data to back it up.
I’m proud to say, we got the funding. Not just because the numbers were right, but because investors don’t only look at due diligence—they invest in people. They saw a team that could handle the speculation and storytelling of a pivot while remaining grounded in operational reality. They saw Operational Grace.
Consider This Post: A successful pivot requires a deep level of trust between the Visionary and the Integrator. If your partnership feels strained, revisit the 3 Essential Conversations to realign.
How to Find Your Flow as a Startup Operator
If you’re feeling the “gridlock” of the middle seat today, ask yourself:
- What are my Rules of Engagement? Does your CEO know where their lane ends and yours begins?
- Am I allowing for the “Monsoon”? Stop trying to fix the weather. Focus on the 10% you can control—your data, your response, and your “Ideal Week” boundaries.
- Where is my “Marble Floor”? In the middle of the chaos, what is the one thing you’re keeping polished?
Consider This Post: If you feel like you’re the one holding every single piece together, you might have fallen into the Fixer’s Trap. Learn how to stop being the bottleneck and start being the designer.
Conclusion: Why an Anchored Mindset is Your Greatest Superpower
Leadership is a “Both/And” journey. As Brené Brown reminds us, we have to be willing to “rumble” with the tension—to sit in the discomfort of holding two truths at once. You must be the rigid protector of the systems AND the flexible partner in the pivot. It’s hard, especially for the ADHD brain that craves order.
But remember: you were hired to be the Anchor because you’re the one capable of holding both ends of the rope.
From Firefighting to Anchored Leadership: Stop Wading Through the Monsoon Alone.
The marble floors of a $5M+ company aren’t built by working harder—they’re built by an operator who knows how to stay Anchored while the storm rages outside. If you’re tired of the “Idea Tornado” blowing your week off course, and you’re ready to master the COO Leadership Mindset, let’s get to work.
Whether you’re battling ADHD-related overwhelm or struggling to align with a high-altitude Visionary, you don’t have to navigate the “Middle Seat” in isolation.
Let’s build your roadmap to move from reactive “Fixer” to strategic “Designer”—the leader your company needs.
