Weird in the Wrong Ways
Working alone has it's pitfalls

Working alone can make you smart, capable, and wildly self-reliant. It can also make you weird in the wrong ways.
Not creative weird. Not visionary weird. I mean the kind of weird that happens when you are carrying the full weight of your work in private, making every decision alone, second-guessing yourself in a vacuum, and trying to build something substantial without real conversation, real reflection, or real support.
A lot of brilliant people do not need more information. They need a room.
They need people who understand the work, can see what they cannot see, can sharpen their thinking, and can remind them they are not crazy when the business gets quiet, the industry gets noisy, or the next move feels bigger than the last one.
That is part of what makes isolation so expensive. It drains momentum. It distorts perspective. It makes strong people carry too much alone for too long.

Disruption School is built for that.
It is not guru camp. It is not performative proximity. It is not one more place to be talked at by people who are mostly selling lifestyle theater.
It is a smart, honest, high-level support space for people building real work in the real world. The kind of room that is often priced in the thousands elsewhere is inside this container in a way that is intentionally accessible.
Because good support should not be reserved for people who are already overfunded.
If you have been doing too much of this alone, this is your reminder that proximity matters, perspective matters, and being well-supported is not a luxury. It changes the work.


