JD and I visited the new Instrument office today, and I’m writing this from the lobby—sitting still in a way I never allowed myself to when this company was my responsibility. There’s something almost disorienting about being in a space built by hands that aren’t yours, for a company that still carries your fingerprints. It’s like returning to a childhood home that has been lovingly renovated—you recognize the foundation, but the feeling is entirely new.
What strikes me most in this moment is how profoundly Instrument has evolved. This is a different business than the one we founded, and I mean that with genuine admiration. The company I helped build was raw—beautifully so, but raw nonetheless. It was a fist fight, a sprint up a hill we weren’t certain we belonged on, driven by urgency, belief, and a touch of defiance. This version, the one I’m sitting inside of now, has none of that tension. It doesn’t need to prove anything. It simply is. It sits confidently in its own skin.
The space reflects that truth. It’s refined. Sophisticated. Feminine in the way strength becomes once it’s fully earned—not loud, not demanding, but unmistakably present. I can feel the bones of the company JD, Vin and I pushed so hard to shape, but they’re wrapped now in something softer, more considered, and undeniably more beautiful than I could have imagined. And maybe that’s the hardest and most rewarding part of being a founder: realizing that the truest measure of success is when the thing you started becomes better than your own limitations.
My Instrument was built out of grit and belief, crafted with late nights, impossible deadlines, and a hunger to belong in rooms that didn’t yet have a seat for us. This Instrument doesn’t carry that insecurity. It stands here with quiet confidence. It belongs without question. And while I never quite figured out how to operate from a place of comfort, I’m proud—deeply proud—that the company found its way there without me needing to.
As I watch people move through the space—some collaborating, some in focused solitude, some simply passing through—I’m struck by how beautifully this office captures the rhythm of modern work. It’s not just an environment; it’s a living interpretation of the hybrid world we inhabit now. There are places to gather, places to retreat, places to think, and places to breathe. It feels intentional. Human. A space built not just for output, but for experience.
And that is its own kind of artistry.
Walking through today, I felt something I didn’t expect: gratitude. Not for the past—though I carry endless gratitude for that—but for the fact that Instrument continued to evolve, to refine, to expand its identity beyond the one we created. That is the dream of any builder: that what you start becomes strong enough to outgrow you.
If you ever have the chance to visit, you should. Stand inside this space and feel what belief, creativity, effort, and evolution can produce when placed in the hands of a new generation who loves it in their own way.
To the team who brought this to life—well done. Truly. We know what it takes to make something look effortless. We know how many hands and hearts are required to create an environment that feels both natural and elevated. You delivered something remarkable. Something worthy of the company’s past and worthy of its future.
Sitting here today, I feel proud—not of what I did, but of what you have done with the foundation we laid.
And there is no better feeling for a founder than that.
If this reflection spoke to you — if you’ve ever stood inside something you once built and felt it had grown into its own life — I hope it reminded you of the quiet pride in letting things evolve beyond you. There’s a humility in that, and a gratitude for the people who carry the work forward in their own way.
If episodes like this resonate, I’d love for you to share them, send them to someone who’s navigating change, or subscribe so these reflections find you each week. These stories are meant to be companions — reminders that growth, reinvention, and renewal are all part of the journey.
Until next time — be kind, be great, work hard… and keep going.