St. Thomas Was the Crash Test
Some environments don’t teach you lessons. They remove your excuses.
Resilience is often praised without acknowledging what it’s compensating for.
In environments without infrastructure, resilience becomes a tax paid daily just to stay in place.
St. Thomas was where the usual buffers—time, cash, certainty—thinned all at once.
After the 2017 hurricanes, the systems most people rely on—power, cash flow, supply chains, timelines—collapsed at the same time.
What remained was execution without infrastructure.
Mornings started with a push cart to the gas station—filling diesel containers just to keep generators running.
There were moments where a single delay could stall everything—because there was no buffer to absorb it.
Independence is often described as freedom.
In practice, it introduces exposure before it delivers control.
Without institutional scaffolding, small variables carry outsized weight.
Cash flow stops being a metric and becomes a constraint.
Timing matters more than intention.
Decisions stack without relief.
That environment makes things visible quickly.
What St. Thomas stripped away was predictability.
What it exposed was the cumulative effect of choices that can’t be deferred, delegated, or diluted.
I realized something I couldn’t ignore:
Independence without systems isn’t autonomy.
It’s volatility.
St. Thomas made that cost undeniable.
It also made something else clear: systems aren’t luxuries. They are stabilizers.
They turn effort into progress and risk into something survivable.
Without them, even good decisions struggle to compound.
That was the line.
Whatever came next would be built differently—on systems, not effort.
—
These are my personal notes.
— Alain
If you’re a:
Founder trying to build beyond your current environment
Investor looking for structured impact opportunities
Ecosystem leader building across regions
Then you already understand the cost of building without systems.
That’s the work we’re solving through Venture Philanthropy Blueprint (VPB).
Where founders, operators, and investors build together
If you’re not ready yet, stay close to the thinking.