Your drive isn't just ambition—it's also the part of you still trying to prove you're enough.
Entrepreneurship doesn't just require strategy and skills—it activates every unresolved belief about worthiness, safety, and belonging. The same drive that fuels your business can also exhaust you. The same independence that makes you capable can also isolate you. Success triggers old fears about visibility, failure confirms old doubts about deserving, and rest feels like giving up.
This book explores how childhood experiences shape the way entrepreneurs relate to work, risk, success, and failure. It examines patterns like overworking to prove worthiness, self-sabotaging before others can reject you, or feeling guilty for wanting more. It draws on attachment theory and developmental psychology to show how early messages about achievement, value, and safety live beneath the surface of business decisions.
Rather than separating personal healing from professional growth, it examines the ways inner child wounds show up in leadership, pricing, boundaries, and delegation. It explores the relationship between your ambition and the child who learned that achievement equals love, or that safety requires control, or that visibility invites danger.
For entrepreneurs who feel driven yet depleted, who build but struggle to enjoy what they've created, or who recognize they're running from something as much as toward something, this book offers insight into the emotional foundations beneath business strategy.
Sofia Lane
Sofia Lane is a nonfiction author known for writing thoughtful books on emotional resilience, self-growth, modern relationships, and finding meaning in everyday life. Her calm and reflective writing style combines psychology, philosophy, and practical insight to help readers navigate life with greater clarity, balance, and self-awareness.
inner child entrepreneurship self-sabotage worthiness overworking childhood trauma business mindset