It’s not lost or ceded after a fight. It’s mine to create and mine to protect.
And that’s the point. Our experience of labor isn’t just about what we produce—it’s about how we are treated while producing it. It’s about dignity, fairness, and humanity. At The Square Peg Club, my labor, my time, and my energy are mine to protect, nurture, and define. They represent not just who I am as a professional, but who I am as a person. I get to say what I need to say, when I need to say it. That’s more empowering than any work environment I’ve been in before.
And I’m not alone. In recent years, talent from traditionally marginalized backgrounds has increasingly turned to entrepreneurship to escape the barriers of traditional employment—limited advancement opportunities, toxic leadership, and inflexible schedules. While entrepreneurship still presents challenges, including access to capital, it’s a powerful testament to the rightful demand for greater agency and compassion.
That’s the kind of boundless kindness that’s missing in so many modern workplaces.
That’s what I hear all the time from my coaching clients. I’ve lived it too. And now, I have the chance to build something better—for myself and others.
The fight for agency-driven work isn’t over.
I hope that in all the discussion about technological advances, we don’t forget that our work is more than just the work: it’s about the conditions under which that labor happens. The right to work with dignity, to be treated with fairness, and to have control over our time and our impact—that’s what labor organizing has always been about. And that’s still worth fighting for.