Between two songs at the show last night, the singer leaned into the mic and started telling us about a different night, at a different brewery.
“We had a few people up saying the verses with us, and we got to the point of really challenging them, over at Lone Girl.”
He smiled at the memory. You could tell it had been a good night. People singing the verses back, the band pushing them to go further, that rare electricity where a room stops being an audience and becomes part of the act.
And the room he was standing in did nothing. Not because we were rude. Because we weren’t there. He was describing the most participatory moment a crowd can have, and he was describing it to a crowd that could only watch him remember it. The story was about being inside the thing. The telling left us outside it.
His intentions were good. That’s what stuck with me. He wasn’t bragging. He was reaching back for something real and trying to share it. But reaching back is the problem. He pointed at a door he’d already walked through and shut, and asked us to admire it from the hallway.
A friend of mine runs a consulting practice and writes about how he got started. I wasn’t there for any of it. I have no idea what his first month felt like. And yet every time I read him, I’m in it. He doesn’t tell me what it was like for him. He puts me in the chair. He writes the fear I’d be feeling, the math I’d be doing at 2 a.m., the moment I’d want to quit. Same raw material as the band guy. Opposite move. One reflects. One invites.
I know the difference because I’ve been the band.
For years I told the story of getting the liquor license for the bar like this: it took eight months, a binder thick enough to stop a door, three trips to a county office where nobody made eye contact, and at least one night I was ready to walk away from the whole thing because the neighborhood eats businesses up that they think will result with people puking in their front yards. That’s a true story. It’s also a story about me, performed for people who weren’t in the binder with me. They nodded. They were polite. They weren’t there. I’ve since changed the tune.
Here’s where it stops being about songs and bars.
Walk through the founding-story page on almost any company website. The origin video. The wall of awards in the lobby. The “our journey” timeline with the little dots. It’s the band guy, professionally lit.
A business standing on stage, reaching back for its proudest night, describing a moment of connection to a customer who wasn’t there and isn’t being invited in. We started in a garage. We won the thing. We grew. The customer reads it the way we watched that singer. Nice for you. I wasn’t there. And you’re not actually talking to me.
The fix isn’t humility, exactly. The band guy was humble. The fix is a change of address. Stop narrating the memory. Build the doorway. Take whatever was true about your proudest night and rebuild it so the other person is standing inside it, feeling what you felt, facing what you faced, before you ever tell them how it turned out. Hand them the key in the hallway instead of the photo album of a vacation they didn’t take.
Most of the people who get this wrong are not careless. They’re the opposite. They care so much about the moment that they hold it instead of handing it over.
They had something true and they kept it warm in their own hands while the room went cold.
We weren’t there. We’re never there. That’s not the obstacle. That’s the whole job.
Stay Positive & What’s The Next Verse?
