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What Bankruptcy Took From Me That Money Cannot Measure

The worst thing bankruptcy took from me was not money.
  • All Blogs
  • FOUNDER JOURNAL
  • What Bankruptcy Took From Me That Money Cannot Measure
  • May 11, 2026 by
    Paolo Maria Pavan


    Money is visible. It leaves traces. You can count what is gone, list what is owed, speak about losses in round numbers and legal language. People understand numbers. They fit on paper. They fit in court files, account statements, and articles written by people who were never in the room when things were actually falling apart.

    What I lost was harder to name.

    I lost the quiet conviction that I could still trust my own judgement.

    I remember one afternoon after the collapse, standing in a small copy shop with a USB stick in my hand. I needed to print documents. Nothing dramatic. Just paper. The place smelled of warm toner and dust. A machine clicked somewhere behind the counter. My shirt was clean but badly ironed, and I had bitten the skin around my thumb until it was raw. When the man asked, very casually, “Single-sided or double-sided?”, I froze for a second too long.

    That was the moment.

    Not because of the printing.

    Because I realised that even a simple decision had started to feel dangerous.

    Before that period, I had been a founder. A man used to deciding, moving, speaking, negotiating, pushing structure onto uncertainty. Then came the slow public and private unravelling. The debts. The judgment. The bad press. The humiliation of seeing your name become shorthand for failure in the minds of people who know nothing about the inner mechanics of your life. And after that, something quieter happened. Something less visible than financial damage.

    My own mind stopped feeling like a place I could stand on.

    That is one of the things bankruptcy can take from you. It can take proportion. It can take spontaneity. It can take the ordinary confidence with which a person moves through a day. You still look functional from the outside. You still answer messages. You still speak in complete sentences. But inside, every decision starts to pass through a layer of doubt, then shame, then fear.

    You do not just ask, “What is the right choice?”

    You ask, “Am I the kind of person who can still choose well?”

    That is a very different question. And it is a far more dangerous one.

    People often imagine bankruptcy as a financial event. It is that, of course. It damages liquidity, continuity, contracts, credibility, access, options. But if you have lived it properly, not as theory, not as anecdote, you know that it is also an assault on inner authority.

    It changes the relationship between a human being and his own reflection.

    There is also a moral wound in it that serious people should not try to soften. A business collapse is not a private philosophical experience. It hits other people. Suppliers. Staff. creditors. Partners. Clients who trusted your continuity. Behind every unpaid amount there is a household, a plan, a form of dependence, sometimes a small but brutal disruption in someone else’s life. An invoice is never just an invoice when cash stops moving. It may be rent. It may be wages. It may be the week somebody had counted on.

    I know this.

    I carry this.

    And I do not believe in rewriting that pain into something elegant just to protect the founder’s pride.

    But even with that responsibility fully acknowledged, another truth remains. The company may fail. The human being must still be prevented from collapsing into total worthlessness in his own eyes. That confusion is where real danger begins.

    Because once a founder starts to believe that commercial failure is moral extinction, he becomes unstable in ways spreadsheets cannot show.

    He may hide more.

    He may drink more.

    He may perform competence while losing contact with reality.

    He may become sentimental, grandiose, numb, or falsely optimistic.

    Or he may do what I did for too long. He may keep functioning externally while internally becoming less and less able to distinguish pressure from distortion.

    That is why I now speak about governance, risk, and compliance with such seriousness. Not because I worship rules. Quite the opposite. I believe rules are only worthy when they protect reality from human self-deception. I now work in GRC because I know what happens when structure leaves the room before the founder does.

    What bankruptcy took from me, then, was not only financial position.

    It took innocence.

    It took ease.

    It took the natural movement of a man who assumes he is still proportionate to his responsibilities.

    For a long time, it also took my ability to receive simple things cleanly. Kindness felt suspicious. Opportunity felt like a trap. Praise felt mistaken. Rest felt undeserved. Even silence could feel accusatory. That is what prolonged shame does. It colonises neutral space.

    You start to live as if every room already contains a verdict.

    Rebuilding did not begin when money improved.

    It began when I understood that remorse and self-erasure are not the same thing.

    A serious man must take responsibility. He must study the collapse. He must name his distortions. He must stop lying to himself. He must understand where judgment failed, where ego took over, where fatigue became denial, where fear dressed itself up as strategy. He must also face the human cost of what happened, without performance and without self-pity.

    But after that, another duty begins.

    He must recover his capacity to see clearly again.

    Not to feel innocent.

    Not to feel heroic.

    Just to see clearly.

    That recovery is slower than outsiders imagine. It comes back in very small ways. You answer one difficult email without flinching. You make one clean decision and do not spend the next hour doubting it. You sit in a meeting without hearing your own name as an accusation in your head. You learn that discipline is not punishment. It is a handrail.

    For me, study helped. Structure helped. ICA certification helped. Work in governance helped. Not because credentials erase history, but because disciplined frameworks can give a damaged mind somewhere honest to stand. I did not need reinvention. I needed reconstruction.

    There is a difference.

    Reinvention is often vanity.

    Reconstruction is moral labour.

    If you are a founder living near the edge of collapse, or after it, do not insult yourself by pretending the damage is only financial. It is deeper than that. But do not insult truth either by saying you are finished as a human being because a structure failed under your watch.

    A broken company and a worthless man are not the same thing.

    They never were.

    Bankruptcy can take money, status, rhythm, trust, and years. Sometimes it takes friendships. Sometimes it takes health. Sometimes it takes the ordinary ease of choosing between single-sided and double-sided paper without feeling a tremor in the soul.

    But it does not get the final word unless you hand it that right.

    The task after collapse is not to recover your old image.

    It is to become someone who can be trusted with reality again.

    in FOUNDER JOURNAL
    # Founder Journal Paolo Maria Pavan
    Paolo Maria Pavan May 11, 2026
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