#NOMOREGOODSOLDIERS Stories
Your Good Soldier story is worth telling, and I want to hear it!
I invite you to share your "and that was the last time I let them do that to me” moment in this consequence-free, judgement free space. I’ll follow up directly with you, mostly just to say thanks for sharing and cheer you on in your next move.
If you’re eager to share but need one last nudge, check out my own Good Soldier story below.
Your privacy is important to me. Therefore, your story will be shared privately with Coach Dave and will not be shared publicly without your written consent. Your email and any other personally identifying information will be stored according to GDPR data protection standards and will not be shared with any third-parties.
My Good Soldier Story
I remember the office with outdated furnishings and incandescent overhead light, the corporate black landline phone I was on, and the dreary parking lot I was looking at through a window of old slit blinds when I was told by an appointed advisor to the startup I was leading, "you'll do what they [the private equity group] tells you, because you're a good soldier, aren't you?" That was my turning point. I didn't quit that day.
It took another year plus of me witnessing myself being a "good solder" before I finally snapped. And snapping wasn't dramatic either. It was just a quiet conversation with a superior about an operational decision we couldn't see eye to eye on. But we both knew it was the end. Thank God that advisor - with whom I never spoke again after that phone call - spoke freely, if not carelessly, because it was the seed I needed planted in my mind and body to get me to one day move on. Moving on scared me. It scared my wife. I remember calling my parents and explaining how I would start a coaching business and they were, essentially, speechless. Only worried, and barely hopeful.
But I knew. I saw how my life would work out if I finally listened fully to myself, even if it meant being abandoned, doubted, or distrusted. Because I trusted myself so very deeply, almost delusionally. And I've been able to now model that self-trust for countless clients and followers of my work who had strived or are striving to break out of their own "good solder" roles - whether in the office, in their industry, or at home.
I started out with Funbringer, LLC, and then boldly stepped out at Hey Coach Dave. Locally, I'm known as Dave O'Connor, Executive Coach - since that's what my office shingle says. Now, I am firmly planted in my origin story of personal and professional freedom and fully own what's going on here: I am no good solder and I am here to support those who don't want to be either.
Whether you are upsetting the status quo inside an organization you wish to remain at, you want to upend the way business is done in your industry, or you want to break out of your routine and explore new ways of leading or living, I'm your guy.
In other words, I'm on a mission to liberate the good soldiers.