When the Ocean View Isn't Enough
When the Ocean View Isn't Enough
When the Ocean View Isn't Enough
A raw account of my terrifying panic attack at the Fontainebleau Hotel, where ignoring health signals and chasing the "full Miami experience" nearly cost me everything. What happens when your body demands attention in a five-star prison.
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4 min
4 min
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May 7, 2025
May 7, 2025
When the Ocean View Isn’t Enough
Fontainebleau Hotel, Miami Beach – Friday April 25, 2025, 09:00 AM
I wake to turquoise light slicing through blackout curtains and the low rumble of the Atlantic. A perfect Miami postcard—except my chest is exploding.
My Apple Watch thinks I’m mid‑sprint: 108 – 139 BPM the moment I sit up. Overnight it never dipped below 96; yesterday it spiked to 161 while I was literally standing still. I ignored the data. Now the data is demanding rent.
Fast‑Forward
Vegas → LA → 2 week at home -> Bodrum -> Istanbul → Miami. Twenty hours door to door. Cat‑nap flights, Claritin for brutal allergies, vitamin‑C + zinc fizz every morning. First night on South Beach? Cocktails, beers, and a THC‑P vape I bought for the “full Miami experience.” I haven’t vaped in five years.
Conference is 48 hours away—CEO Coaching International Summit, my chance to put AI Operator in front of a ballroom full of whales. The plan: rest hard Thursday, own the summit Friday. The reality: alcohol, adrenaline, “just one more hit,” repeat.
The Spark
Friday. I’m constipated—three days straight. Stomach bloated. I shuffle toward the bathroom, fail, pace the room. Numb left arm, pins in my shoulders, vision tunneling. Heart attacks start on the left side, my brain whispers.
“I’m having a heart attack. I have a family—I need help!” I shout to no one.
The cordless hotel phone coughs static. No dial tone. I’m alone, in underwear, certain I’m about to die in a five‑star prison.
Doorway Desperation
I fling the door open. Two housekeepers freeze. They don’t speak English; I try Spanish but it doesn’t land, so I switch to French and repeat the plea. They fumble with the room phone—dead. Their cell signals drop. My heart rockets past 150 BPM.
Thought loop:
My kids will wake up without a dad. My wife will raise them alone. I traded life for deals and dopamine.
Cavalry Arrives
Security finally storms in, sits me down, checks fingertips, grounding questions. Paramedics follow—three of them, scanners, leads, glucometer, the whole mobile ER.
Paramedic: “Chest pain one to ten?”
Me: “Eleven—but if this isn’t a heart attack, tell me now.”
Blood pressure elevated, but ECG clean. Diagnosis: acute panic attack. My second in ten years, and somehow worse than the first because now I have two small children who think I’m invincible.
No ambulance ride, no invoice, just a laminated discharge sheet and an embarrassed middle‑aged founder learning—again—that biology beats bravado.
Total runtime: ~2 hours.
48 Hours of Static
I suit up, shuffle to the summit, mumble through hallway intros. Forget a prospect’s name, offer a garbled pitch. Skip half the sessions, crash for a two‑hour blackout nap, fake polite at dinner.
Sunday night I call my wife:
“Don’t freak out, but I almost punched my ticket in Miami.”
She listens, not panicked—just present. That hurts worse.
Debrief With Data
Ōura readiness: 38 (normal is 80+)
HRV: cratered at 18 ms
Resting HR: 96‑109 (should be 60‑80)
The metrics were screaming three days before my body did. I muted them.
New Non‑Negotiables (Realistic Version)
No back‑to‑back drinking or vaping. One night max, never two in a row.
THC only in rare social settings—and only if next‑day readiness ≥ 80 and HRV rebounds.
10‑minute daily meditation & data check before caffeine, inbox, or social; if readiness < 80, nightlife is off‑limits.
Hotel Lessons
Insist on a working landline. If it’s cordless, test it.
Ask staff about emergency protocols on check‑in. Multilingual basics save lives.
Why I’m Telling You
High‑velocity operators glamorize sleep debt, chemical hacks, and “hustle wins.” I almost orphaned my kids because I believed the hype. If one founder reads this and decides to slow down, I win.
Slow down, listen to your body, and live long enough to enjoy what you build.
When the Ocean View Isn’t Enough
Fontainebleau Hotel, Miami Beach – Friday April 25, 2025, 09:00 AM
I wake to turquoise light slicing through blackout curtains and the low rumble of the Atlantic. A perfect Miami postcard—except my chest is exploding.
My Apple Watch thinks I’m mid‑sprint: 108 – 139 BPM the moment I sit up. Overnight it never dipped below 96; yesterday it spiked to 161 while I was literally standing still. I ignored the data. Now the data is demanding rent.
Fast‑Forward
Vegas → LA → 2 week at home -> Bodrum -> Istanbul → Miami. Twenty hours door to door. Cat‑nap flights, Claritin for brutal allergies, vitamin‑C + zinc fizz every morning. First night on South Beach? Cocktails, beers, and a THC‑P vape I bought for the “full Miami experience.” I haven’t vaped in five years.
Conference is 48 hours away—CEO Coaching International Summit, my chance to put AI Operator in front of a ballroom full of whales. The plan: rest hard Thursday, own the summit Friday. The reality: alcohol, adrenaline, “just one more hit,” repeat.
The Spark
Friday. I’m constipated—three days straight. Stomach bloated. I shuffle toward the bathroom, fail, pace the room. Numb left arm, pins in my shoulders, vision tunneling. Heart attacks start on the left side, my brain whispers.
“I’m having a heart attack. I have a family—I need help!” I shout to no one.
The cordless hotel phone coughs static. No dial tone. I’m alone, in underwear, certain I’m about to die in a five‑star prison.
Doorway Desperation
I fling the door open. Two housekeepers freeze. They don’t speak English; I try Spanish but it doesn’t land, so I switch to French and repeat the plea. They fumble with the room phone—dead. Their cell signals drop. My heart rockets past 150 BPM.
Thought loop:
My kids will wake up without a dad. My wife will raise them alone. I traded life for deals and dopamine.
Cavalry Arrives
Security finally storms in, sits me down, checks fingertips, grounding questions. Paramedics follow—three of them, scanners, leads, glucometer, the whole mobile ER.
Paramedic: “Chest pain one to ten?”
Me: “Eleven—but if this isn’t a heart attack, tell me now.”
Blood pressure elevated, but ECG clean. Diagnosis: acute panic attack. My second in ten years, and somehow worse than the first because now I have two small children who think I’m invincible.
No ambulance ride, no invoice, just a laminated discharge sheet and an embarrassed middle‑aged founder learning—again—that biology beats bravado.
Total runtime: ~2 hours.
48 Hours of Static
I suit up, shuffle to the summit, mumble through hallway intros. Forget a prospect’s name, offer a garbled pitch. Skip half the sessions, crash for a two‑hour blackout nap, fake polite at dinner.
Sunday night I call my wife:
“Don’t freak out, but I almost punched my ticket in Miami.”
She listens, not panicked—just present. That hurts worse.
Debrief With Data
Ōura readiness: 38 (normal is 80+)
HRV: cratered at 18 ms
Resting HR: 96‑109 (should be 60‑80)
The metrics were screaming three days before my body did. I muted them.
New Non‑Negotiables (Realistic Version)
No back‑to‑back drinking or vaping. One night max, never two in a row.
THC only in rare social settings—and only if next‑day readiness ≥ 80 and HRV rebounds.
10‑minute daily meditation & data check before caffeine, inbox, or social; if readiness < 80, nightlife is off‑limits.
Hotel Lessons
Insist on a working landline. If it’s cordless, test it.
Ask staff about emergency protocols on check‑in. Multilingual basics save lives.
Why I’m Telling You
High‑velocity operators glamorize sleep debt, chemical hacks, and “hustle wins.” I almost orphaned my kids because I believed the hype. If one founder reads this and decides to slow down, I win.
Slow down, listen to your body, and live long enough to enjoy what you build.
When the Ocean View Isn’t Enough
Fontainebleau Hotel, Miami Beach – Friday April 25, 2025, 09:00 AM
I wake to turquoise light slicing through blackout curtains and the low rumble of the Atlantic. A perfect Miami postcard—except my chest is exploding.
My Apple Watch thinks I’m mid‑sprint: 108 – 139 BPM the moment I sit up. Overnight it never dipped below 96; yesterday it spiked to 161 while I was literally standing still. I ignored the data. Now the data is demanding rent.
Fast‑Forward
Vegas → LA → 2 week at home -> Bodrum -> Istanbul → Miami. Twenty hours door to door. Cat‑nap flights, Claritin for brutal allergies, vitamin‑C + zinc fizz every morning. First night on South Beach? Cocktails, beers, and a THC‑P vape I bought for the “full Miami experience.” I haven’t vaped in five years.
Conference is 48 hours away—CEO Coaching International Summit, my chance to put AI Operator in front of a ballroom full of whales. The plan: rest hard Thursday, own the summit Friday. The reality: alcohol, adrenaline, “just one more hit,” repeat.
The Spark
Friday. I’m constipated—three days straight. Stomach bloated. I shuffle toward the bathroom, fail, pace the room. Numb left arm, pins in my shoulders, vision tunneling. Heart attacks start on the left side, my brain whispers.
“I’m having a heart attack. I have a family—I need help!” I shout to no one.
The cordless hotel phone coughs static. No dial tone. I’m alone, in underwear, certain I’m about to die in a five‑star prison.
Doorway Desperation
I fling the door open. Two housekeepers freeze. They don’t speak English; I try Spanish but it doesn’t land, so I switch to French and repeat the plea. They fumble with the room phone—dead. Their cell signals drop. My heart rockets past 150 BPM.
Thought loop:
My kids will wake up without a dad. My wife will raise them alone. I traded life for deals and dopamine.
Cavalry Arrives
Security finally storms in, sits me down, checks fingertips, grounding questions. Paramedics follow—three of them, scanners, leads, glucometer, the whole mobile ER.
Paramedic: “Chest pain one to ten?”
Me: “Eleven—but if this isn’t a heart attack, tell me now.”
Blood pressure elevated, but ECG clean. Diagnosis: acute panic attack. My second in ten years, and somehow worse than the first because now I have two small children who think I’m invincible.
No ambulance ride, no invoice, just a laminated discharge sheet and an embarrassed middle‑aged founder learning—again—that biology beats bravado.
Total runtime: ~2 hours.
48 Hours of Static
I suit up, shuffle to the summit, mumble through hallway intros. Forget a prospect’s name, offer a garbled pitch. Skip half the sessions, crash for a two‑hour blackout nap, fake polite at dinner.
Sunday night I call my wife:
“Don’t freak out, but I almost punched my ticket in Miami.”
She listens, not panicked—just present. That hurts worse.
Debrief With Data
Ōura readiness: 38 (normal is 80+)
HRV: cratered at 18 ms
Resting HR: 96‑109 (should be 60‑80)
The metrics were screaming three days before my body did. I muted them.
New Non‑Negotiables (Realistic Version)
No back‑to‑back drinking or vaping. One night max, never two in a row.
THC only in rare social settings—and only if next‑day readiness ≥ 80 and HRV rebounds.
10‑minute daily meditation & data check before caffeine, inbox, or social; if readiness < 80, nightlife is off‑limits.
Hotel Lessons
Insist on a working landline. If it’s cordless, test it.
Ask staff about emergency protocols on check‑in. Multilingual basics save lives.
Why I’m Telling You
High‑velocity operators glamorize sleep debt, chemical hacks, and “hustle wins.” I almost orphaned my kids because I believed the hype. If one founder reads this and decides to slow down, I win.
Slow down, listen to your body, and live long enough to enjoy what you build.