Thursday, May 14, 2026

Leadership Is Not About the Noise

Leadership is getting a lot of attention lately but not all of it reflects what leadership actually requires.

It is easy to point fingers and demand action from the sidelines. It is harder to recognize context, responsibility, and timing.

The truth is, leadership is not about rushing into every fire especially the ones someone else lit.

As Stephen Covey said, “Seek first to understand, then to be understood.” Real leadership starts with clarity not reaction.

John Maxwell reminds us, “A leader is one who knows the way, goes the way, and shows the way.” That does not mean inserting yourself into chaos you did not create. It means guiding people forward with intention and integrity.

And do not even get me started on emotional intelligence and leadership.

Self-awareness means understanding your role in a situation.
Self-regulation means not reacting just because others demand it.
Social awareness means recognizing what people actually need not what creates headlines.
Responsible leadership means choosing responses that move people forward not deeper into division.

I recently asked two leaders a simple question. Looking back, knowing what you know now, what would you change.

One said nothing.
One said everything.

That difference says a lot.

Leadership is not about defending every past decision or positioning yourself as a victim of circumstances. It is about learning, adjusting, and growing. It is about having the humility to say I would do this differently and the courage to do better next time.

When children are involved especially in situations as serious as threats the priority should be safety, truth, and stability. Not political theater. Not misplaced blame.

Leadership is also discernment. Knowing when to step in and when stepping in would only make things worse.

It is not about optics.
It is about outcomes.

It is not about who reacts first.
It is about who helps a community move forward.

We should be asking better questions. Who created the situation. Who escalated it. And who is actually working toward resolution.

Because real leadership is not loud. It is steady. It is thoughtful. And it is focused on what comes next not just what makes noise today.

Have a beautiful Thursday all,

-srt

Monday, May 11, 2026

Leadership Leaves a Trail


Leadership is not reaction. It is responsibility.

It requires self-awareness to understand your role, humility to learn from experience, and discipline to choose your response not just react to pressure.

You cannot create division and then claim the mantle of integrity and leadership.
True leadership owns its impact and works to move people forward.

A simple leadership test
Leadership always leaves a trail
The question is whether it is marked by broken trust or forward progress

Do not chase the noise.
Create the direction.

Happy Monday y'all,

-srt


#MondayMotivation #Leadership #LeadershipMatters #EmotionalIntelligence #Accountability #OwnYourImpact #LeadForward #ClarityNotChaos #ReaCoachingandConsulting

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Owning Our Worth: The Power of Saying “Thank You”

One of the most impactful reminders from guest speaker Serena Olson during Dream It, Be It was surprisingly simple: when someone gives you a compliment, just say “thank you.”

Such a small phrase. And yet, for so many of us, it feels anything but natural.

Instead, we often do the opposite. We deflect. We downplay. We brush it aside.
“Oh, it was nothing.”
“I just got lucky.”
“Anyone could have done it.”

These responses may feel humble, even polite. But in reality, they quietly chip away at something important. When we minimize a compliment, we’re not just dismissing our own effort, we’re also diminishing the sincerity and intention behind the person offering it.

A compliment is a gift. And when we refuse it, even unintentionally, we leave that gift unopened.

So what if we tried something different?

What if we allowed ourselves to receive recognition fully, without apology, without explanation, without shrinking?

What if we simply said:
Thank you. I worked really hard on that.
Thank you. I’m really proud of how that turned out.

There is power in those words. Not arrogance, power.

Because owning our accomplishments doesn’t make us boastful. It makes us honest. It grounds us in our effort, our growth, and our progress. It allows us to stand in the truth of what we’ve done and who we’re becoming.

And perhaps even more importantly, it gives others permission to do the same.

When we confidently accept a compliment, we model self worth. We normalize it. We show that it’s okay to recognize our value without diminishing it.

But this practice isn’t just about receiving, it’s also about giving.

A genuine compliment has the ability to shift someone’s entire day. It can reinforce confidence, validate effort, and remind someone that they are seen. In a world that often focuses on what’s missing or what could be improved, choosing to speak encouragement is a powerful act.

So this month, let’s practice two simple, meaningful shifts:

Offer genuine compliments freely.
And when one comes your way, receive it fully, with a confident, heartfelt “thank you.”

No qualifiers. No deflection. Just ownership.

Because you are worthy of the recognition you receive. And sometimes, the most powerful thing you can do is simply accept it.

Happy Thursday all,

-srt


#ThursdayThoughts #ReaCoachingandConsulting #ThankYou