Thursday, March 26, 2026

The Difference Between Avoidance and Breakthrough

Earlier this week, we talked about how growth often sits on the other side of hard.

Today, let’s slow that down.

Because not all discomfort is the same.

Some discomfort protects you.
Some discomfort grows you.

Wisdom is learning the difference.

Avoidance is subtle. It doesn’t always look dramatic. Sometimes it looks like:

  • “I’ll do it later.”
  • “Now isn’t the right time.”
  • “I need to feel more confident first.”
  • “Maybe it’s just not meant for me.”

Avoidance reduces anxiety in the short term.
But long term, it shrinks your world.

Breakthrough discomfort feels different.
It feels stretching.
Vulnerable.
Uncertain.

But it expands you.

Let’s explore this together.

Coaching Tool 1: Comfort Zone Mapping

Draw three circles.

Circle One: Comfort
What feels safe, predictable, easy?
Where are you operating mostly on autopilot?

Circle Two: Stretch
What feels uncomfortable but aligned with who you want to become?
What would require courage but not chaos?

Circle Three: Panic
What feels overwhelming or unsafe?
What genuinely exceeds your current capacity?

Growth happens in the stretch zone.

Not in comfort.
Not in panic.

Ask yourself:
"Have I been calling something “too much” when it’s actually just stretch?"

Coaching Tool 2: Fear Inventory

Write this sentence at the top of a page:

“If I move forward with this, I’m afraid that…”

Then let yourself answer honestly.

  • I’ll fail.
  • I’ll look foolish.
  • People will judge me.
  • I won’t succeed.
  • I’ll lose stability.
  • I’ll disappoint someone.

Fear is not the enemy.
Unexamined fear is.

Now ask:
Is this fear protecting me from harm or protecting me from growth?

Coaching Tool 3: Limiting Belief Challenge

Identify the belief underneath the hesitation.

  • “I’m not ready.”
  • “I’m bad at conflict.”
  • “I’m not leadership material.”
  • “I don’t follow through.”
  • “I always mess things up.”

Now challenge it.

What evidence suggests this belief is not entirely true?

Where have you handled something hard before?
Where have you surprised yourself?

Limiting beliefs lose power when exposed to evidence.

Coaching Tool 4: Action Despite Discomfort

Courage is not the absence of fear.
It is movement with fear present.

You don’t need to leap.
You need to step.

What is the next right step — not the whole staircase?

  • Draft the email.
  • Schedule the meeting.
  • Set the boundary.
  • Submit the application.
  • Start before you feel fully ready.

Confidence follows action.
Not the other way around.

A Gentle Reflection

Sometimes we stay in discomfort longer than necessary because it is familiar.

Staying stuck can feel safer than risking change.

But consider this:

What might your life look like six months from now if you consistently chose to stretch over avoidance?

Growth rarely announces itself loudly.
It usually shows up disguised as inconvenience.

The resistance you feel may not be there to stop you.

It may be there to strengthen you.

So, I’ll leave you with this:

What “hard” thing might actually be your doorway?

And what small step are you willing to take?

Growth lives on the other side of hard.

Coaching you to move toward the hard and become stronger because of it.

-srt

Monday, March 23, 2026

Growth Lives on the Other Side of Hard



There is a version of you that exists beyond the thing you’re currently avoiding.

The conversation.
The boundary.
The risk.
The application.
The change.

We often think growth will feel exciting and affirming. But more often, growth feels like resistance.

It feels inconvenient.
Uncomfortable.
Exposing.

And because it feels uncomfortable, we assume it must be wrong.

But what if the discomfort isn’t a stop sign?

What if it’s a doorway?

Avoidance gives immediate relief. When we postpone the hard thing, we feel safer (at least for a moment). But over time, avoidance quietly builds frustration, self-doubt, and stagnation.

Breakthrough works differently.

Breakthrough asks you to:

  • Have the hard conversation
  • Try before you feel ready
  • Say no when it would be easier to say yes
  • Show up imperfectly

Every time you move toward discomfort instead of away from it, you build evidence:

  • I can handle this.
  • I can grow.
  • I can do hard things.

Courage is not something you wake up with.
It’s something you build.

And it is built in moments of decision.

So, here’s your question for today:

"What is one thing you’ve been avoiding that might actually move your life forward?"

Don’t overhaul everything.
Just take one step.

Growth lives on the other side of hard.

Step into the stretch,

-srt 

P.S.  My sister Shelly would have turned 62 today. Losing her has been one of the hardest doors I’ve ever walked through. I miss her deeply and I try to live in a way that would make her proud.  Happy Heavenly Birthday Wheezer.  I LOVE you.  


Thursday, March 19, 2026

Deeply Rooted: The Oak Principle

On Monday, we talked about bending instead of breaking.

Today, I want to introduce a simple framework I call The Oak Principle.

Oaks do not survive storms because they are rigid.
They survive because they are deeply rooted and flexible enough to move with the wind.

Strength and adaptability are not opposites.
They work together.

The Oak Principle is built on four practices.

1. Expand Your Thinking

When pressure rises, rigid thinking follows.

This is not how it was supposed to go.
If this fails, I fail.

Instead, ask:

"What else could this mean?"
"Is there another path to the same outcome?"
"Am I attached to the method or committed to the mission?"

Flexibility in thinking builds resilience in action.

2. Anchor to Your Values

Oaks bend at the branches, not at the roots.

Identify your top three non-negotiables.
Then evaluate:

Does this adjustment align with them?
Am I responding intentionally or reacting emotionally?

When values are clear, adaptation becomes strategic.

3. Strengthen Your Circle of Control

Draw two circles.

Circle One. What I Cannot Control

  • Other people’s reactions
  • Market shifts
  • Timing
  • Unexpected change

Circle Two. What I Can Control

  • My effort
  • My communication
  • My boundaries
  • My response

Growth lives in the second circle.

4. Lead Adaptively

Strong leaders:

  • Face reality honestly
  • Regulate their emotions
  • Preserve the mission
  • Adjust the plan

Bending is not surrender.
It is disciplined flexibility anchored in purpose.

If this week is stretching you, ask:

"Where do I need to bend at the branches while staying rooted at the core?"

That is The Oak Principle in action.

Wishing you a steady and intentional close to your week.

Happy Thursday Lovelies,

srt

P.S. My mom used to remind me that the wonderful thing about oak trees is that they drop acorns to build the next generation of oaks. Strength is not just about surviving the storm. It is about what grows because you stood through it.