The 10,001 Unit Panic and the Physicality of Scale
The pins and needles in my left hand are currently screaming at a frequency usually reserved for dial-up modems. I slept on my arm entirely wrong last night, pinning it beneath my own weight like a discarded 4×4, and now the blood is trying to fight its way back into my fingertips with the grace of a riot. It is a stupid, physical mistake. It is a reminder that we are made of meat and bone, and no matter how much I think my life exists in the digital sphere of emails and spreadsheets, I am ultimately tethered to a physical frame that has very specific, non-negotiable requirements for space. Business scaling is exactly like this. You spend 11 months thinking you are a digital titan, a master of logistics and cash flow, until you realize you have pinned your own growth beneath the physical weight of your success.
The clipboard in my right hand-the one that still works-feels heavier than it did 41 minutes ago. I am standing on the edge of a concrete loading dock, looking at 101 pallets of high-density polyethylene parts that have absolutely nowhere to go. We won the contract. That was the champagne moment 31 days ago. We toasted to the 2001% increase in quarterly volume. We high-fived until our palms were sore, thinking we had cracked the code of infinite growth. But business schools,