When Pride Comes Before the Fall
In February 2007, reality hit hard. I had become so leveraged that when I approached my bank for a $5 million loan—money I genuinely believed I was entitled to—they refused. Their rejection blindsided me.
“What do you mean?” I remember asking in disbelief. “I have $60 million in equity in the golf course alone.”
Their response was devastating but straightforward: “Yes, but we’re not comfortable lending to you anymore.”
Meanwhile, my expenses continued mounting. While some of my businesses were profitable, the golf course—my largest asset—was bleeding money despite its substantial paper value. The gap between asset-rich and cash-poor became painfully clear.
With no other options, I decided to declare bankruptcy. The financial loss was enormous, but the emotional toll was far worse.
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The Hardest Conversation
The most painful moment wasn’t signing the bankruptcy papers. I was driving to my mother’s house to deliver the news that would break her heart.
The only reason I ever wanted to be wealthy was to provide for my mom—to buy her a house and a car, to give her security after all she’d sacrificed for me. Now I had to tell her not only that I had failed, but that she would lose her home because of my mistakes.
You’re going to have to move because I lost your house.
Those words still haunt me. The look on her face when I told her is something I’ll never forget.
Lessons From Losing Everything
Looking back, I can identify several critical mistakes that led to my downfall:
- I confused equity with liquidity, believing my net worth on paper would always translate to available cash
- I allowed pride to drive business decisions instead of pragmatism
- I failed to maintain adequate cash reserves for unexpected challenges
- I overextended myself with too many non-cash-flowing assets
The lawsuit was merely the trigger—my financial structure was already a house of cards waiting to collapse. I had built an empire on leverage without considering what would happen if that leverage suddenly disappeared.
Rebuilding With New Principles
After losing everything, I had to rebuild from scratch. This time, I approached business with hard-earned wisdom. I now understand that true wealth isn’t measured by how much you own, but by how resilient your financial position is when faced with adversity.
Today, I maintain healthy cash reserves. I focus on cash flow over asset accumulation. I make decisions based on data rather than ego. And most importantly, I remember that no business victory is worth hurting the people I love.
The $100 million I lost taught me something money can’t buy: humility. While the financial loss was devastating, the true cost was seeing how my pride and poor decisions hurt those closest to me.
If you’re building wealth today, remember that impressive assets on paper mean nothing if you can’t weather a storm. Don’t let pride drive your decisions. And never, ever risk the security of those who depend on you to prove a point.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What was the main cause of your $100 million loss?
While the lawsuit was the triggering event, the root causes were overleverage, pride, and confusing equity with actual liquidity. I refused to settle a lawsuit because I wanted to prove myself right, and when cash flow tightened, I discovered that having equity doesn’t guarantee access to capital.
Q: How did you recover financially after such a massive loss?
Recovery was a slow, humbling process. I started from zero, focusing on cash-flowing businesses rather than asset accumulation. I maintained stronger cash reserves, made decisions based on financial prudence rather than ego, and prioritized stability over the appearance of wealth.
Q: What was the hardest part about going through bankruptcy?
Without question, the hardest part was telling my mother she would lose her home. The only reason I ever wanted to be successful was to provide for her, and having to admit I had failed her was far more painful than any financial loss.
Q: What financial principles do you follow now that you didn’t before?
I now distinguish clearly between equity and liquidity, maintain substantial cash reserves, avoid excessive leverage, focus on consistent cash flow rather than asset accumulation, and make business decisions based on data and risk assessment rather than pride or emotion.
Q: What advice would you give to entrepreneurs about managing success?
Success can create a dangerous illusion of invincibility. Remember that paper wealth isn’t the same as financial security. Build your business with enough redundancy to weather unexpected storms, keep your ego in check when making decisions, and never risk the security of those who depend on you just to prove a point or win an argument.