Thursday, June 5, 2025

The Myth of Someday Leadership

“One day, when I get the title…”

“Once I’m in charge, then I’ll speak up…”

“After I’ve been here long enough, I’ll take the lead…”

Sound familiar?

That’s the myth of someday leadership—the idea that leadership is something we step into later, once we’ve checked enough boxes, climbed high enough, or been given permission.

It’s a trap. And it’s holding too many people back from their full potential.

Waiting for Permission Is a Silent Career Killer

Leadership doesn’t begin with a title. It begins with a choice. Every single day, you have the opportunity to lead right where you are. You don’t need a job description that says “Manager” to influence change, inspire others, or drive results.

And yet, so many talented, capable people hesitate—waiting for “someday” to arrive.

But here’s the truth:

Someday is a moving target.

There’s no invitation. No announcement. No golden moment where someone taps your shoulder and says, “You’re ready now.”

You’re ready the moment you decide to show up like a leader.

Leadership Is a Behavior, Not a Badge

Leadership is not about power or control—it’s about ownership, mindset, and impact.

You’re leading when you:

  • Take initiative without being asked
  • Set the tone in meetings through positivity and presence
  • Offer feedback that helps the team grow
  • Act with integrity, even when it’s inconvenient
  • Ask, “How can I help?” instead of “What’s in it for me?”

These actions don’t require authority. They require awareness.

The Danger of “Someday Thinking”

Waiting for the right moment to lead does three dangerous things:

1. It delays your growth.

You can’t develop leadership muscles if you never use them. Waiting until you’re “in charge” to learn how to lead is like waiting until race day to start training.

2. It stifles your voice.

If you’re always holding back your ideas, your perspective, and your contributions, your value remains invisible.

3. It gives your power away.

True leadership comes from within, not from someone else granting you a title.

Start Leading Now—No Title Required

If you want to be a great leader someday, start being a good one today. Build trust. Create clarity. Influence by example. Encourage others. Raise your hand.

Don’t wait to become the leader you’re meant to be. Be it now.

  • Lead the meeting when no one else will.
  • Mentor someone who’s struggling.
  • Speak up when something doesn’t feel right.
  • Champion new ideas, even if they aren’t yours.

Final Thought: “Someday” Is Today

The myth of someday leadership is just that—a myth. Leadership isn’t given. It’s chosen. Not once, but every day.

So ask yourself:

What are you waiting for?

You don’t need a new role. You need a new mindset.

Lead now. Grow now. The world doesn’t need more titles—it needs more leaders.

Happy Thursday all,

-srt

Thursday, May 29, 2025

The Secret to Lasting Influence

We’ve all seen it: people chasing titles, followers, or fame in the name of “influence.” But lasting influence—the kind that inspires, shapes, and endures—doesn’t come from going viral or sitting at the top of an org chart.

Here’s the truth:

The real secret to lasting influence is consistency, character, and connection.

And it’s not a secret anymore.

1. Consistency Builds Credibility

Influence isn’t about one brilliant moment. It’s about showing up—over and over again.

  • Do you follow through on what you say?
  • Do you speak with integrity, even when it’s uncomfortable?
  • Do you lead by example when no one’s watching?

People are drawn to leaders they can count on—not just when things are good, but especially when things get hard. Consistency breeds trust, and trust is the foundation of influence.

2. Character Speaks Louder Than Charisma

Charisma may turn heads, but character turns hearts.

True influence comes from the quiet decisions you make when there’s nothing to gain. It’s in the way you treat the intern and the CEO with the same respect. It’s how you give credit, own mistakes, and stand for something bigger than yourself.

Influence that lasts is rooted in who you are—not just what you do.

3. Connection Creates Impact

People don’t follow perfection. They follow authenticity. If you want to influence others, start by making them feel seen, heard, and valued.

  • Ask questions that matter.
  • Listen with your full attention.
  • Share stories that connect, not just impress.

Your ability to connect on a human level is what turns influence into legacy.

4. Influence Isn’t a Platform—It’s a Responsibility

We often think of influence as something to earn, but it’s really something to steward. Whether you influence one person or one million, your words, actions, and energy create ripples.

So the question isn’t “How big is my influence?”

It’s “What kind of influence am I creating?”

5. The People with the Most Influence Aren’t Always the Loudest

They’re the ones who lead with purpose, stay grounded in values, and build others up without needing the spotlight.

They’re coaches, mentors, parents, teammates, friends. They inspire quietly, steadily—and powerfully.

And chances are, if you’re reading this, you’re already influencing more than you realize.

Influence Isn’t About Being Known. It’s About Making a Difference.

  • You don’t need a title to lead.
  • You don’t need a stage to impact.
  • You don’t need permission to be powerful.

So go be the kind of influence this world needs—real, kind, bold, consistent.

Because the secret’s out:

Lasting influence isn’t about status. It’s about service.

Happy Thursday all,

-srt


Thursday, May 22, 2025

A Glitch in the Matrix: Grace, Growth, and Getting a Grip

You know those days when nothing feels quite real, like you accidentally slipped into a parallel universe where time moves weird, your brain is buffering, and reality keeps glitching? Yeah — that was me last Friday.

It started with a terrible night’s sleep. You know, the kind where you wake up every hour thinking it's time to get up… only to find out you still have three hours until your alarm. By the time morning finally came, I had hit snooze so many times I actually missed the alarm altogether.

No big deal, I thought. I’ll just shift a few things. Until I looked at the clock.

I was already late.

Late for the first thing on my schedule — a meeting I wasn’t mentally (or physically) prepared for. I threw on something vaguely presentable and bolted. As I sat there trying to participate like a functioning adult, I felt that internal tug: I forgot something.

And then it hit me.

I had a second engagement — something important. Something I had committed to with a friend. Something I was supposed to be dressed up for.

Cue the stomach drop.

She was already there. Waiting. And I wasn’t there.  She called me.  I had to admit it slipped my mind.  Then I had to get ready fast and get there.

The Spiral

I could feel the shame rising. That voice in my head started in with the greatest hits:

  • “You’re so unreliable.”

  • “You can’t even manage a calendar?”

  • “Why did you say yes if you couldn’t follow through?”

But then something strange happened — something that felt like a glitch in the matrix in the best way.

Instead of continuing the freefall into self-loathing, another voice quietly cut in:

“Hey. You messed up.  But you’re human.  Give yourself some grace.  Then get a grip.”

And that became the theme of my day.

Giving Myself Grace

Let me be clear: I hate disappointing people. And I especially hate disappointing myself. But grace doesn’t mean pretending it didn’t happen — it means looking at what did happen and responding with compassion, not punishment.

  • Grace meant texting my friend and owning it fully: “I completely forgot, and I am truly sorry. I will be there in 10 minutes.”

  • Grace meant not catastrophizing this one off-day as a reflection of my character.

  • Grace meant recognizing that sleep deprivation and mental clutter aren’t moral failings — they’re warning signs.

Getting a Grip

But grace isn’t the end of the story — it’s the middle.

After the apology and the deep breath, it was time to regroup.

Here’s how I “got a grip”:

  1. Checked my calendar for the rest of the week (and set notifications for everything).

  2. Asked myself honestly: What systems failed? (Answer: Relying on my memory instead of my two calendars. Again.)

  3. Committed to a better sleep routine for the next few nights, not as punishment — but as a reset.

A Final Thought

We all have those “glitch in the matrix” days. Days that start sideways and spiral from there. But they don’t define us.

You are allowed to:

  • Be forgetful.

  • Be late.

  • Disappoint someone.

  • Mess up your day.

And still be a good person. A responsible person. A growing person.

Give yourself grace. Then get a grip. And then — try again tomorrow.

Because tomorrow isn’t about being perfect. It’s about being present — and ready for the next glitch.

Happy Thursday you amazing humans,

-srt