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  • S2E9 Clarity Before Commitment: How Do You Know When You’re Ready to Go Again?
    2026/05/18

    This season has followed three different kinds of threshold moments.

    One woman standing at the edge of ownership. One woman trying to leave a successful career. One woman rebuilding after disruption she didn’t choose.

    All three have crossed their threshold. And now all three are standing at the same kind of edge.

    Not the edge of the original decision. What comes after it.

    The question has shifted. It’s no longer “should I?” It’s something quieter. Something harder.

    “How do you know when you’re ready to go again?”

    In this episode, TuRhonda Freeman names the distinction that determines whether the next chapter holds — not whether you’re capable of going again, but whether you’re choosing from the right place.

    If you’ve been through a hard transition — a disruption you didn’t choose, an exit that tested you, a commitment that was harder than expected — and you’re standing at the edge of something new, this episode is for you.

    In This Episode

    • Why the question at this stage is no longer “should I?” — and what it becomes instead
    • The two things that can feel like readiness — and why they are not the same thing
    • “A commitment made from urgency and a commitment made from clarity can look identical at the signing. The difference shows up in year two.”
    • Choosing from the wrong place vs. choosing from the right place — the distinction that determines whether the next commitment holds
    • Three signals to examine before you move: whether the why is organized around what you’re entering or leaving, whether the vision extends past the commitment moment, and whether the urgency is pointing toward the right thing or just toward moving
    • “You are not trying to eliminate uncertainty here. You are trying to identify what is actually driving the decision.”
    • Why going again is not starting over — and what the in-between actually produces that belongs in the next chapter
    • “That is not nothing. That is the advantage.”

    Key Quotes

    “Am I choosing this because it’s right — or because I’m ready to stop being in the in-between?”

    “A commitment made from urgency and a commitment made from clarity can look identical at the signing. The difference shows up in year two.”

    “You are not trying to eliminate uncertainty here. You are trying to identify what is actually driving the decision.”

    “The question was never whether you were capable of going again. It was always whether you were choosing from the right place.”

    This Week’s Question

    Is the desire to move again — right now — organized around what you’re entering, or what you’re leaving?

    Work With TuRhonda

    This episode asks the question. The Decision Exposure Review is the conversation that examines the answer — specifically, for your position, with full view of what the next commitment will actually require of your life.

    Not to validate the direction. To examine whether the next chapter is structurally sound before the decision is irreversible.

    If you’re at the edge of a new commitment — coming out of a hard transition and ready to move — this is the conversation that belongs before you do.

    Before the decision. When you still have the room to look at it clearly.

    Learn more about the advisory work behind this show: DearMonday.co

    About The Dear Monday Podcast

    Dear Monday is a podcast about the decisions that change the shape of your life. Each episode explores the realities behind ownership — franchise investment, business ownership, career exits, and other high-stakes commitments that reshape financial and personal life.

    Hosted by TuRhonda Freeman, former franchise owner and deal advisor.

    Clarity before commitment.

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    14 分
  • S2E8 Clarity Before Commitment: Do You Actually Want the Life, or Just the Decision?
    2026/05/11

    The research is done. The FDD has been reviewed. You’ve talked to owners, run your own version of the numbers, attended discovery day. A yes is forming — you can feel it.

    And something is still making you pause in a way you can’t quite name.
    Not doubt, exactly. Not a gap in the information. Something quieter. Something underneath all the other questions you’ve been asking.

    In this episode, TuRhonda Freeman names it.

    There is one question that almost nobody asks at this stage — because it isn’t in the FDD and no one in the discovery process is paid to raise it.

    “Do you actually want the life — or just the decision?”

    Those are not the same thing. And this episode is about the difference.

    In This Episode

    • Why the pause at the threshold is almost never about missing information — and what it’s usually about instead
    • The ownership narrative: what it is, why it’s compelling, and why almost nobody examines the difference between the narrative and the life before the commitment is made
    • The distinction that determines whether the decision holds: wanting the decision vs. wanting the life — and the specific test that separates them
    • “I’ve seen people make both decisions. Same brand. Same numbers. Same process. A year later, they were living completely different experiences of the same business.”
    • Relief as a signal: what it means when the primary feeling about the commitment is relief — and why that matters more than most people realize
    • The three-part diagnostic — Why This, Why Now, Why Me — and the answers that hold at 11pm on a Tuesday in year two
    • What clarity at the threshold actually looks like — and what it is not
    • “That distinction is small. And it is everything.”

    Key Quotes

    “Do you actually want the life — or just the decision? Those are not the same thing.”

    “I’ve seen people make both decisions. Same brand. Same numbers. Same process. A year later, they were living completely different experiences of the same business. The numbers didn’t separate them. The process didn’t separate them. This question did.”

    “If the primary feeling is relief, that matters more than most people realize. Because relief is about ending the evaluation — not about wanting the life that follows.”

    “That distinction is small. And it is everything.”

    This Week’s Question

    Can you describe the life you’re choosing — at its hardest, at its most ordinary — and still want it?

    Work With TuRhonda

    This episode names the question. The Decision Exposure Review is the conversation that examines what the commitment will actually require of your life — not the narrative version, the actual one.

    The financial exposure. The operational picture. The conditions that need to be true for the commitment to be structurally sound — mapped against the life you’re about to enter.

    Independently. Without a stake in whether you move forward.

    This is the moment most people skip. And it is the one that determines whether the decision holds.

    If something in this episode named the pause you’ve been carrying — this is where that conversation belongs. Before the commitment. When the thinking still belongs entirely to you.

    Learn more about the advisory work behind this show: DearMonday.co


    About The Dear Monday Podcast

    Dear Monday is a podcast about the decisions that change the shape of your life. Each episode explores the realities behind ownership — franchise investment, business ownership, career exits, and other high-stakes commitments that reshape financial and personal life.

    Hosted by TuRhonda Freeman, former franchise owner and deal advisor.

    Clarity before commitment.

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    16 分
  • S2E7 Clarity Before Commitment: How Do You Know When You’ve Waited Too Long?
    2026/05/04

    There is a version of waiting that is responsible.

    The timeline is moving. Real things are accumulating — runway, readiness, a foundation for what comes next. The plan is being built. The condition is specific and the endpoint is real.

    And there is a version of waiting that becomes the risk.

    It looks identical from the outside. Same logic. Same language. Same legitimacy. But the endpoint keeps moving. The condition is always almost met.

    In this episode, TuRhonda Freeman names the difference — and asks the question that most people in this position have never been asked directly.

    “Are you still being patient — or are you avoiding the irreversible?”

    If you’re planning a career exit — if you’ve been quietly building the off-ramp, running the numbers, waiting for the right moment — this episode is for you.
    Because the exit is a one-way door. And the longer the wait, the more important it is to know which kind of waiting you’re doing.

    In This Episode

    • The two versions of waiting — and why they look identical until they don’t
    • The irreversibility question: what it means that the exit is a one-way door, and how to tell if the conditions are moving to keep pace with the door getting closer
    • For the person planning a corporate exit: the three things the extended timeline is actually costing — beyond the income gap
    • The window cost: why the terms of your exit are negotiable now, and what changes when they’re not
    • The financial opportunity cost that doesn’t show up in a paycheck — and why it’s easy not to count
    • The identity cost: what it means to become a beginner again, and whether you have the appetite for the phase that comes immediately after you leave
    • A four-question diagnostic — and why you only need one to land
    • “At some point, the timeline stops being something that happens to you. And becomes something you choose.”

    Key Quotes

    “There is a version of waiting that is responsible. And there is a version of waiting that becomes the risk.”

    “Are you still being patient — or are you avoiding the irreversible?”

    “The exit is a one-way door. When you walk through it — the title, the income, the institutional credibility, the structure that organized how you moved through the world — that version of your life is gone. Not paused. Gone.”

    “Can you tolerate becoming a beginner again? Not in theory. In practice.”

    This Week’s Question

    Is the patience still serving the plan — or has it started serving the weight of the door?

    Work With TuRhonda

    This episode asks the question. The Decision Exposure Review is the conversation that examines the answer — specifically, for your exit, in your current position.

    Not to validate the timing. To look at what the exit actually exposes on its current terms.

    The real financial gap. The window that’s available right now and what it looks like when it narrows. The conditions that need to be true for the exit to be structurally sound — and what changes if those conditions aren’t in place when you move.

    If you’re planning a corporate exit — or any significant career or ownership transition — this is the conversation that belongs before the decision is irreversible. Not after.

    Independently. Without a stake in whether you go forward.

    Before the exit. When the thinking still belongs entirely to you.

    Learn more about the advisory work behind this show: DearMonday.co

    About The Dear Monday Podcast

    Dear Monday is a podcast about the decisions that change the shape of your life. Each episode explores the realities behind ownership — franchise investment, business ownership, career exits, and other high-stakes commitments that reshape financial and personal life.

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    11 分
  • S2E6 Clarity Before Commitment: What Are the Obligations Nobody Mentions?
    2026/04/27

    Every major ownership decision has something in common.

    It doesn’t matter if you’re evaluating a franchise, planning a corporate exit, or rebuilding after a disruption you didn’t choose. The process around you — the brokers, the advisors, the coaches, the communities — is designed, in its architecture, to move you forward.

    Nobody in those rooms is paid to slow the process down. Nobody’s job is to surface the full weight before the commitment is made.

    And that creates a blind spot. The same one. Every time.

    In this episode, TuRhonda Freeman names it — not from research, but from experience. She has sat in all three seats: as someone who bought a franchise while still employed, as someone who eventually took the leap into full-time ownership to scale, and as someone whose world was turned upside down by career disruption.

    What she learned from each seat is what this show is built on.

    “The obligation is what the decision will continue to require of you — in time, in structure, in capacity — after you’ve already committed, and before the return arrives.”

    This is the episode that names the category. And walks you through it.

    In This Episode

    • Why every process built around a major ownership decision is designed to move you forward — and what that means for the layer it almost never surfaces
    • TuRhonda’s personal testimony: the three seats she’s sat in, and what she learned from each one that no plan prepared her for
    • For the person evaluating a franchise, acquisition, or business entry: the operational weight of year one — not the projection, the reality — and the question to answer before you sign
    • For the person planning a career exit: the pace and identity cost of the building phase that the financial plan doesn’t capture, and how long that gap lasts
    • For the person navigating the in-between after disruption: what the accumulating urgency to move costs the quality of the next decision — and how to tell when it’s driving rather than informing
    • Why the obligation isn’t in the FDD, the transition plan, or the rebuilding strategy — and what it would mean to look at it before the commitment, not after
    • “There isn’t a formal process for that. That’s the gap this work exists to fill.”

    Key Quotes
    “The obligation is what the decision will continue to require of you — in time, in structure, in capacity — after you’ve already committed, and before the return arrives.”

    “Nobody in those rooms is paid to slow the process down. Nobody’s job is to surface the full weight before the commitment is made.”

    “I thought disruption was a reset. It wasn’t. It was a compression. The timeline shortened. The stakes didn’t.”

    “The people who navigate ownership well are not the people who went in without the weight. They are the people who looked at it directly before they committed.”

    This Week’s Question
    What will this decision continue to require of me — after I’ve committed, and before it produces what it promised?

    Work With TuRhonda

    This episode names the category. The Decision Exposure Review is the conversation that examines it — specifically, for your decision, in your position.
    Not the opportunity. The obligation. The financial picture across the full commitment period. The conditions that need to be true. The exposure that isn’t in the documents. What the decision will require of your life between the commitment and the return.

    This is the moment most people skip. And most people don’t realize they’ve skipped it until they’re already inside something they can’t easily adjust.
    If you’re evaluating an entry — a franchise, a business acquisition, a significant ownership commitment — this is the conversation that belongs before you sign.
    If you’re planning an exit — from a corporate role, from a business, from a chapter that’

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    29 分
  • S2E5 Clarity Before Commitment: Where Do You Go When the Ground Shifts?
    2026/04/20

    She didn’t choose this.

    The role ended. The plan she trusted no longer held. The ground moved without her permission. And now she’s not standing at the edge of a decision — she’s standing in the aftermath of one.

    This is Renee. And she is not starting from scratch.

    In this episode, TuRhonda Freeman introduces the third woman in the Dear Monday conversation — the strategic rebuilder — and names the specific challenge of making a consequential decision from a position you didn’t choose to be in. This is not a resilience story. It’s a strategy conversation.

    From the urgency of the in-between to the most dangerous inputs to a major decision, TuRhonda names what disruption does to decision-making — and what it takes to make the next move sound. The difference between movement and progress. The difference between rebuilding toward something and rebuilding away from something. The distinction that determines whether the next commitment holds — or simply trades one version of the in-between for another.

    Renee has experience. The question is how she uses it.

    In This Episode

    • Why Renee’s moment is fundamentally different from Erin’s and Allison’s — and what that requires of her decision-making
    • The two ways disruption distorts major decisions: the reactive move and the paralyzed one — and how to recognize which one you’re in
    • Why the urgency of the in-between is one of the most dangerous inputs to a consequential decision
    • The difference between rebuilding toward something and rebuilding away from something — and the four signs that tell you which one you’re doing
    • Why “starting from experience” is not the same as starting over
    • The four questions that determine whether your next commitment is structurally sound — not optimistic, not convenient, sound
    • What Renee is actually carrying into her next chapter — and what that’s worth

    Key Quotes

    “Renee is not starting from scratch. She’s starting from experience. Those are not the same thing.”

    “Not all movement is progress. And not all rebuilding is improvement.”

    “Given what has changed — what must be true for the next decision to be sound? Not optimistic. Not convenient. Sound.”

    “When the ground shifts, you don’t get to choose the moment. But you do get to choose the structure you rebuild on.”

    This Week’s Question

    Given what has changed — what must be true for the next decision to be sound?


    Work With TuRhonda

    If you’re in Renee’s position — if the ground has shifted and you’re standing in the in-between, feeling the pressure to move — the Decision Exposure Review was built for this moment.

    Not to validate a direction you’ve already chosen. Not to build confidence in a plan you’re already committed to. To map the real exposure of what you’re considering before the decision becomes irreversible: the financial picture across the transition, the conditions that need to be true, the options you preserve — or close — depending on how you enter the next commitment.

    When you’ve been through disruption, the pressure to move is real. Independent scrutiny — from someone outside the urgency, with clear eyes — is most valuable precisely when the stakes are high and the in-between is telling you to move faster than the careful looking allows.

    Before the commitment. Not after.

    Learn more about the advisory work behind this show: DearMonday.co

    About Dear Monday

    Dear Monday is a podcast about the decisions that change the shape of your life. Each episode explores the realities behind ownership — franchise investment, business ownership, career exits, and other high-stakes commitments that reshape financial and personal life.

    Hosted by TuRhonda Freeman, former franchise owner and deal advisor.

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    20 分
  • S2E4 Clarity Before Commitment: What Are You Pretending Not to Know?
    2026/04/13

    She already knows.

    That’s what makes Allison different. She’s not waiting for information. She’s not in the discovery process the way Erin is. She has the plan, the research, the numbers she’s been running quietly for months. She knows what she needs to do.
    She just hasn’t done it yet.

    In this episode, TuRhonda Freeman introduces Allison — the corporate exit architect — and names the specific things she’s been choosing, quietly, not to act on. The exit window. The cost of the dual life. What “one more year” actually costs on both sides of the ledger. The exposure of public failure for a woman whose success has always been visible.

    And the distinction that determines whether her timeline is sound: is the waiting producing something — or protecting something?

    The exit is not just a career move. It’s a financial commitment with a real exposure profile. This episode names what that means before the decision is made.

    In This Episode

    • Why Allison already knows — and what she’s been choosing not to act on
    • The difference between strategic timing and expensive delay — and how to tell which one you’re in
    • The five things she’s pretending not to know: the window, the dual life cost, what “one more year” really costs, the exposure of public failure, and why she’s really still there
    • Why the corporate role is not just an income — it’s reputation insurance
    • What the exit actually exposes: the financial gap, the household picture, the conditions that need to be true
    • The questions almost no one asks before leaving stable income


    Key Quotes
    “Strategic timing has a defined condition. Expensive delay has a moving one.”

    “The corporate role is not just an income. It is reputation insurance. To leave is to make a bet on herself that everyone she knows can see.”

    “The exit belongs in the same room as any other major financial commitment. It deserves the same independent scrutiny. And it is almost never given that scrutiny — because the industry around career transitions is designed to move people forward, not through.”


    This Week’s Question

    Is the waiting producing something — or protecting something? And what is it costing on the side of the ledger I haven’t looked at?


    Work With TuRhonda

    If you’re in Allison’s position — if you’re close to an exit and haven’t fully mapped what it exposes — this is exactly the conversation the Decision Exposure Review was built for.

    Not to validate the exit. Not to build confidence in a direction already chosen. To map the real financial exposure before the decision is irreversible: the income gap, the household picture across the transition, the conditions that need to be true for the exit to be structurally sound.

    Before the exit. Not after.

    Learn more about the advisory work behind this show: DearMonday.co

    About The Dear Monday Podcast

    Dear Monday is a podcast about the decisions that change the shape of your life. Each episode explores the realities behind ownership — franchise investment, business ownership, career exits, and other high-stakes commitments that reshape financial and personal life.

    Hosted by TuRhonda Freeman, former franchise owner and deal advisor.

    Clarity before commitment.

    Connect

    DearMonday.co

    If this episode helped you think more clearly about a decision in front of you — share it with someone who may be facing the same choice.





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    23 分
  • S2E3 Clarity Before Commitment: What Does Your Yes Actually Commit You To?
    2026/04/06

    You're closer to yes than you've ever been. The research is done. The fear has changed shape — gotten quieter, more specific. Something has shifted.
    But before that yes lands, there's a question worth asking: what are you actually saying yes to?

    In this episode, TuRhonda Freeman walks through the layers of commitment that most people don't examine directly until they're already inside them. The FDD tells you what you're buying. This conversation is about what you're becoming.
    From the financial yes — including what it looks like under pressure — to the operational, relational, and identity commitments that follow a signature, this episode is about slowing the yes down long enough to make sure you know its full shape. Not to stop it. To make sure it holds.

    In This Episode

    • The two kinds of fear in a major commitment — and why the second one arriving is actually a sign of progress
    • The four layers of yes: financial, operational, relational, and identity
    • What the FDD tells you — and what it doesn't
    • The five questions almost no one asks before signing (and why they matter more than the ones everyone asks)
    • What a yes that holds actually looks like — and why it's never a fearless one
    • The difference between a yes driven by momentum and a yes built on honest reckoning

    Key Quotes

    "The FDD tells you what you're buying. This conversation is about what you're becoming."

    "A yes that holds is not a fearless yes. There is no such thing in a commitment this size."

    "The people I've watched navigate ownership well didn't go in without fear. They went in with their eyes open. There's a difference."

    The Five Questions to Ask Yourself Before You Sign

    1. What does a hard week look like in this business — and can I hold that
    2. Who in my life needs to understand what I'm committing to before I commit to it?
    3. What is my plan for the financial pressure of year one — not the projection, the plan?
    4. What does getting out look like, and am I prepared for that to be harder than getting in?
    5. Why this, why now, why me — and can I answer that honestly at 11pm on a Tuesday in year two?

    This Week's Question

    If I said yes today — what am I actually saying yes to? And have I looked at all of it?

    Work With TuRhonda

    If this episode named something you haven't fully looked at yet — if there are questions here you can't answer clearly — this is the conversation TuRhonda has with people before they sign anything. Before the commitment. When the thinking still belongs entirely to you.

    Learn more about the advisory work behind this show: DearMonday.co

    About Dear Monday

    Dear Monday is a podcast about the decisions that change the shape of your life. Each episode explores the realities behind ownership — franchise investment, business ownership, career exits, and other high-stakes commitments that reshape financial and personal life.

    Hosted by TuRhonda Freeman, former franchise owner and deal advisor.

    Clarity before commitment.

    Connect

    • Website: DearMonday.co
    • Apple Podcasts
    • Spotify

    If this episode helped you think more clearly about a decision in front of you — share it with someone who may be facing the same choice.


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    25 分
  • S2E2 Clarity Before Commitment: What Are You Waiting for Someone to Tell You?
    2026/03/30

    You've done the research. You've read the FDD, run the numbers, talked to current owners. By every reasonable measure, you have what you need to decide.
    And you're still waiting.

    In this episode, TuRhonda Freeman names the pattern she watched repeatedly during her years inside franchise ownership and deal advisory — the particular kind of waiting that looks like due diligence but functions like something else entirely.

    The discovery process is designed to move you forward. That's not a flaw — it's how it works. But it means the burden of clarity rests on you, not the process. And the thing most people are waiting for — permission, certainty, the moment when the doubt finally lifts — isn't something any validation call, discovery day, or franchise broker can give them.

    This episode is about what you're actually waiting for. And what it would mean to give it to yourself.

    In This Episode

    • Why the discovery process is built to create momentum — and what that means for you as the buyer
    • The difference between certainty and clarity — and why only one of them is available before you sign
    • What Erin is really waiting for (and why it's not more information)
    • The four things people most often need someone to tell them — and why those answers have to come from inside
    • The signs that research has become a holding pattern
    • What the question underneath all of it actually is

    Key Quotes
    "The process was built to move you forward. That means the burden of clarity is on you — not the process."
    "Certainty is knowing it will work. Clarity is knowing why you're doing it."
    "None of those answers are available from outside. But the question — asked honestly — is the first move toward clarity."


    This Week's Question
    What am I waiting for someone to tell me — and what would it mean if I told it to myself?

    Work With TuRhonda
    If something in this episode landed — if you recognized your own waiting, or heard a question that named something you hadn't been able to name — this is the conversation TuRhonda has with people before they sign anything. Before the commitment. When the thinking still belongs entirely to you.

    Learn more about the advisory work behind this show: DearMonday.co

    About Dear Monday
    Dear Monday is a podcast about the decisions that change the shape of your life. Each episode explores the realities behind ownership — franchise investment, business ownership, career exits, and other high-stakes commitments that reshape financial and personal life.

    Hosted by TuRhonda Freeman, former franchise owner and deal advisor. Clarity before commitment.


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    26 分