A holomorphic disk is the image of an injective holomorphic map $f:\mathbb D \to \mathbb C^n$ from the unit disk $\mathbb D \subset \mathbb C$ to $\mathbb C^n$.
Let $\Omega$ be a pseudoconvex domain in $\mathbb C^n$. Let $D=f(\mathbb D)\subset \overline\Omega$ be a holomorphic disk in the closure of $\Omega$ that is the uniform limit of holomorphic disks in $\Omega$. The Continuity Theorem implies, that if the boundary $\partial D$ is contained in $\Omega$, then so is $D$.
What if an inner point $p\in D$ of the disk lies in the boundary? Can another inner point of the disk lie in $\Omega$?
Preliminary results:
By the continuity theorem, an inner point of $D$ in the boundary of $\Omega$ immediately implies that there is also at least one point of $\partial D$ in $\partial \Omega$. Points of $\partial D$ in $\partial \Omega$ are not enough to force $D$ into the boundary, as $\mathbb D \times{0} \subset \mathbb D \times \mathbb D$ shows.
If both $D$ and $\partial \Omega$ are smooth (at $p$), then at $p$ we have a complex tangent vector to both $D$ and $\partial \Omega$, so by Levi-pseudoconvexity a real tangent direction in which $D$ enters inside $\Omega$ necessitates a corresponding real tangent direction in which $D$ exits $\overline \Omega$. So in this case the answer is no.
Passing to smaller subdisks around the point in $\partial \Omega \cap D$ shows that such a point is never isolated, by the continuity theorem.
Since a singularity of $D$ is isolated, we can always find a regular point of $D$ in $\partial \Omega$ in our setting.
Bonus question:
What if $D$ is not a limit of inner disks?