01/15/2026
I was listening to The Diary of a CEO on my way to Float Boston, and something stopped me in my tracks. The author asked a guru if it was selfish to focus on building his business and financial stability instead of helping others in need. The response was simple: “You have to fill your bucket before you can fill others.”
That hit close to home because I stepped down from my career for this exact reason, it had drained my emotional and spiritual buckets to the point where I felt like I wasn't even human anymore.
We live in a culture that celebrates burnout as selflessness and exhaustion as dedication. But when your emotional and spiritual bucket is empty, everything you give comes from depletion—not abundance. Floating has become one of the few places we see people truly refill that bucket. No noise, no expectations, no roles to perform—just space to reset.
And when you leave feeling fuller, clearer, and calmer, helping others stops feeling like a sacrifice and starts feeling natural again. If you’ve been running on empty, our doors are open when you’re ready to refill.