Question: How many therapists does it take to change a light bulb?
Answer: Just one, but the bulb must want to change.
This old joke nails the truth—you can’t force help. Even if the problem’s unbearable and the fix seems obvious.
Worse, a rescuer’s zeal often points to his own unresolved issues, projected onto others. Instead of fixing himself, he chases others to “save” them.
A person must ripen to a new state on his own. Otherwise, it’s either empty form or outright harm. Losing 30% of body weight in a month, inheriting a billion, or sudden fame? That’s a curse, not a gift.
The F1 car is bliss for the driver, but death for anyone else.
Saying “I desperately want change!” can be a form of self-deception. Some secretly crave suffering, not change. It’s a different story if someone has already tried everything he could.
What matters is the action already taken. Sooner or later, that man will change his bulb—he’ll find his superpower, build a business, secure funding, or break into new markets. If you can speed up his process — go for it!
Help the doers. Water what grows on its own.
Sincerely yours,
-Alexander
About me:
As a business therapist, I help tech founders quickly solve dilemmas at the intersection of business and personality, and boost company value as a result.
How can I help you?
If you've long been trying to understand what is limiting you and/or your business and how to finally give important changes a push, then The Catalyst Session is designed specifically for you. Book it here.