Yes, but then you need to be able to market your DSL and get buy-in. Otherwise you will forever be just a team of one. And then need to sell to all the stakeholders of the project the idea of trusting one person for all the development.
So in addition to the skill of creating a DSL, you need the skills of thoroughly documenting it, training other people to use it, creating tools for it, and explaining the benefits in a way that gets them more excited than just using an existing Boring Old Programming Language.
Which is certainly possible. You can get non developers excited if they can use it for answering their own questions or creating their own business rules, for example. But it's a distinct skill set from cranking out code to solve problems. It requires a strong understanding of the UX (or DX) implications of this new language.