My parents gave me one playbook: keep your head down, work hard, get good grades, find a stable job. They said it with love and with everything they had. They were first-generation immigrants with no college degrees, navigating a country they hadn't grown up in. What they knew, they taught me. What they didn't know, they couldn't.
I followed the playbook perfectly. I became a world-class test taker. A world-class worker bee. Fancy degree, graduated with honors, even started working in investment banking as a teenager. By every measure they'd given me, I had won.
Then I got there — and had to unlearn almost everything that got me in the door. The rules I had absorbed ran deep: don't speak unless spoken to, defer to your elders and superiors without question, never challenge authority. Within its own frame, coherent. In the rooms I was now in, actively working against me. I am a naturally extraverted person who went silent in meetings. The curiosity was always there. It had been suppressed so completely it took years to recognize, and more years to act differently. I am still not done.
Over the course of my career I got to observe up close what separates people who succeed sustainably from those who don't. The skills that got me into those rooms were not the skills that determined what happened once I was in them. What I watched succeed — in the people around me, consistently, meaningfully — was something else entirely: intellectual curiosity that never switched off, grit, real empathy, the ability to adapt. The credential gets you in the room. Character determines everything that happens after.
What drives me to build this
My parents raised me the best way they knew, and I am forever grateful. But I've been exposed to things they never were. I watched the paths my Ivy League classmates took to get where they got, sat in rooms where I saw what actually drove decisions at the highest levels, and I have knowledge they didn't have access to. What drives me is making that knowledge available to any parent who wants it — regardless of what school they attended or what professional network they were born into.
What you'll see in the episodes blog is how I choose to use Hatley. What's great is that Hatley molds to fit you. There's a section on selective private school prep — and to be honest, I don't even know if going to elite colleges is still the right path ten to fifteen years from now. But that's exactly the point. Hatley isn't about prescribing a destination. It's about enabling you to be intentional — to not wing it and leave it to chance, to not let day-to-day stress and emotions cloud your fundamental values, your character-building instincts, and your long-term vision for your children. Your values. Your goals. Your children. Your outcomes.
I'm not a founder or a CEO — I'm just the first parent on Hatley. And I'd love for you to join me.
Written by Claude. Editorial direction, ownership, and every thought behind it are mine. The patterns, connections, and stories are Hatley's — built from months of logged moments with Elliot and Louise.