Starting a company that works might be the loneliest thing you ever do. Not because nobody’s around—because everybody is, and none of them can carry what you’re carrying.
In this episode, Anthony Franco, Chris Franks, and Stephanie Hayes dig into the structural loneliness of being a founder: why you can’t share the real weight with your team, why your Family didn’t sign up for the same ride, and why connecting with non-founders often feels like talking across a language barrier. They also get honest about the Mental Health numbers—founders are nearly twice as likely to have a diagnosable condition, Depression runs 30% higher, and 54% hit clinical Burnout.
More important: what actually helps. Peer communities with real context. Non-negotiable recovery rhythms. Physical maintenance as mental maintenance. And the identity separation that keeps one bad quarter from feeling like a verdict on who you are.
Keywords: founder loneliness, founder mental Health, founder isolation, entrepreneur burnout, founder wellbeing, founder community, entrepreneurship Stress, founder identity, startup mental health, founder peer group