“All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to us.”
— J.R.R. Tolkien

Founders spend a lifetime believing they can control outcomes. They control strategy, capital, people, risk, and timing. For decades, this belief serves them well. It builds companies, creates wealth, and sustains them through crisis after crisis. Control becomes not just a skill, but an identity.

But Tolkien’s words expose the one truth no founder escapes: 

You do not get to decide how long you are here—only what you do with the time you are given.

You will never know how many sunrises remain. You do not get to rewind missed moments, pause difficult chapters, or skip the hard seasons of leadership and life. Expansion plans can be delayed. Succession plans can be postponed. Life cannot.

All you get is now.

Yet many founders in their seventies and beyond behave as though time is still negotiable. They plan as if years are guaranteed. They delay transition as if the future is certain. They remain deeply operational, convinced that stepping back can always happen “later.”

But time does not wait for certainty.

For most of their careers, founders measured success through numbers—revenues, margins, valuation, assets accumulated, opportunities pursued. These metrics once made sense. They justified sacrifice and rewarded endurance. They were the language of winning.

However, there comes a stage when the numbers continue to rise, but life quietly begins to shrink. The business grows stronger, while the founder’s most precious asset diminishes. That asset is not capital or influence.

It is time.

Money can be replenished.
Assets can be restructured.
Businesses can recover.

Time, once spent, is irretrievable.

The greatest miscalculation founders make at this stage is overestimating how much time remains. They assume there will be another year to slow down, another cycle to prepare successors, another season to finally live differently. But time does not announce its limits. It simply disappears.

This is not ambition.
It is denial disguised as responsibility.

Many founders mistake constant activity for relevance. They believe their presence is what keeps the organization alive. In truth, relevance evolves. Operational leadership belongs to those with energy and runway. Strategic wisdom belongs to those who have already walked the path.

The tragedy is not that founders stay involved—but that they stay involved too long, solving problems that no longer require their genius, while postponing a life that still has meaning beyond the boardroom.

They delay family moments that will not repeat.
They postpone rest until rest is no longer possible.
They defer peace until peace becomes elusive.

Succession, then, is not merely a governance issue. It is a reckoning with time.

Passing the baton is not an admission of decline. It is an act of clarity. It signals that the founder understands the difference between holding power and preserving legacy.

Great founders eventually stop asking, “What more can I build?”
They begin asking, “What is the highest use of the time I have left?”

Because leadership, at its highest form, recognizes that you cannot add more hours to life—you can only choose how meaningfully you live the ones remaining.

You do not get to choose how long you are here.
You do not know how many sunrises remain.

All you get is now.

And now is calling for wisdom—not delay, not fear, not control—but a deliberate choice before time escapes.

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Navigating 2026


A no-nonsense Zoom Webinar for CEOs and founders operating under pressure. Learn how to break free from operational overload, make clear strategic decisions in uncertain conditions, focus time on what truly drives results, and lead with discipline when the margin for error is thin.

🗓 January 24, 2026 (Saturday)
⏰ 10:00 AM
💻 Via Zoom
💰 PHP 2,500

📩 0917-3247216 | service@wbadvisoryasia.com (Look for Christine)