Why High-Achievers Get Bored After Winning: One CEO's Unexpected Discovery

You’d think leaving the executive suite would be the ultimate victory. After building a company from the ground up — or in Christine Landis’s case, inheriting and scaling one — the dream is usually to clock out, relax, and enjoy the fruits of your labor. But what happens when the dream itself becomes the problem?

Landis’s story reveals a paradox many successful entrepreneurs never see coming: The goal that kept you motivated for decades might actually bore you once you reach it.

From Rungs to the Top: How She Built It All

Landis didn’t inherit success on a silver platter. She started as a processor at a fintech company in the casino industry, methodically working her way through quality control, management, and eventually landing at the top as president and CEO. When her mother — the original founder from the 1970s — passed away in 2010, Landis inherited not just a company, but a narrow market position with a single product.

Instead of coasting, she did what driven people do: she invested heavily in technology, expanded into new product lines, and competed against publicly traded firms. The satisfaction wasn’t just financial — it was creative. “I loved creating new products,” she reflected. “It was truly a joy to recognize a gap and figure out how to solve it.”

Eight years of this relentless innovation caught the attention of a buyer with an irresistible offer. She sold the company. Within three months, she was pregnant. Everything seemed perfect.

The Unexpected Dark Side of “Making It”

Then reality hit. Without the structure of running a company, Landis found herself untethered. She’d never truly not worked. The downtime felt alien — she recalls sitting in traffic on a Monday morning, heading to yoga, wondering why everyone else wasn’t at work too.

“Once I adapted to having more control over my time and seeing that as a privilege, as the goal we all aspire to, I was able to embrace the gift of being able to choose how I spend my time,” she said. But getting to that acceptance took real effort.

Early motherhood filled much of her newfound freedom, yet something was missing. The problem-solving muscle that had driven her success for decades wasn’t being used. She wasn’t just resting — she was restless.

The Insight That Changed Everything

The turning point came from an unexpected place: her experience delegating as a corporate leader. She realized that protecting her own time and energy as a parent — hiring experts to handle household tasks so she could focus on what mattered — was actually a lesson wrapped in resentment.

Many of her friends faced the same struggle: drowning in the logistics of family life, with no bandwidth left for presence and joy. That gap in the market sparked an idea. Just as she’d solved problems as a CEO, she could solve this one now.

Back to the Game

Landis rented an office space and launched Peacock Parent — a resource helping busy parents delegate household management so they could show up more fully for their families. She also created Proxy by Peacock Parent to connect families with pre-vetted services.

But here’s what surprised her most: she loved it. Not because of the money, but because the game was on again. “I had no experience with social media or B2C marketing, so exploring that space and learning was like sending myself back to business school — in the best possible way,” she said.

The ideation phase thrilled her: big thinking with no limits, possibilities expanding in all directions, the pure creative fuel that executive life had taught her to crave.

The Real Measure of Success

Landis operates Peacock Parent on a five-year plan, but she’s unbothered about the timeline to a potential next retirement. “The plan was never about making money — it’s about what I wanted to accomplish,” she explained. Personal fulfillment, not financial metrics, is her new measure of “winning.”

This reframing matters. For high-achievers who’ve already proven they can accumulate wealth, the next frontier isn’t more money — it’s meaning. The restlessness wasn’t a bug in her success; it was a feature of her wiring. She needed challenge, creation, and impact. Once she understood that, early retirement stopped looking like a goal and started looking like a pit stop.

The lesson hidden in her story: sometimes the real work begins after you’ve won the first game.

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