Thursday, May 28, 2026

Leaders Talk to Each Other, Not Around Each Other

One of the quickest ways to damage trust in any organization, relationship, or team is when people stop talking to each other and start talking around each other.

It happens quietly at first.

A frustrated conversation after a meeting.
A side text message instead of a direct phone call.
A growing list of assumptions that never gets clarified.

Before long, confusion replaces clarity, tension replaces trust, and culture begins to crack under the weight of unresolved conflict.

The truth is this:
Healthy organizations are not built by avoiding hard conversations.
They are built by learning how to have them well.

Whether you lead a business, nonprofit, ministry, team, or family, difficult conversations are unavoidable. The question is not if they will happen. The question is how we choose to handle them.

Real leadership does not recruit allies, fuel division, or create confusion.
Real leadership creates clarity, accountability, emotional safety, and trust.

Why People Avoid Hard Conversations

Most people do not avoid difficult conversations because they are weak or careless. They avoid them because they are uncomfortable.

We fear:

  • Being misunderstood
  • Hurting someone’s feelings
  • Conflict escalating
  • Losing relationships
  • Looking unkind or confrontational

So instead of addressing the issue directly, people often:

  • Vent to others
  • Build quiet resentment
  • Make assumptions
  • Avoid communication entirely
  • Use passive-aggressive behavior
  • Seek validation instead of resolution

Unfortunately, avoidance rarely protects relationships.
More often, it slowly damages them.

Unspoken tension has a way of leaking into culture, communication, morale, and trust.

Healthy Conversations Require Emotional Intelligence

Emotionally intelligent leaders understand that hard conversations are not about “winning.”

They are about:

  • Preserving relationships
  • Solving problems
  • Creating understanding
  • Building trust
  • Protecting culture

Healthy communication requires maturity, humility, and intentionality.

And sometimes the most loving thing a leader can do is address the uncomfortable thing directly.

7 Tips for Having Hard but Healthy Conversations

1. Address the Issue Early

The longer tension sits unaddressed, the heavier it becomes.

Small frustrations often become major relational breakdowns simply because no one addressed them early.

Healthy leaders do not wait until anger explodes.
They communicate while the issue is still manageable.

Do not delay difficult conversations hoping problems will disappear on their own.
Most do not.

2. Talk To the Person, Not About the Person

This is where many cultures begin to break down.

When people discuss problems with everyone except the person involved, confusion and division grow quickly.

If you have an issue with someone:

  • Speak directly
  • Be respectful
  • Seek understanding first
  • Avoid gathering allies

Direct communication builds trust.
Indirect communication destroys it.

3. Check Your Motives Before the Conversation

Before speaking, ask yourself:

  • Am I trying to help or punish?
  • Do I want resolution or validation?
  • Am I reacting emotionally or responding thoughtfully?
  • Am I willing to listen too?

Self-awareness matters.

If your goal is to embarrass, control, or “win,” the conversation will likely become unhealthy before it even begins.

Healthy conversations require healthy intentions.

4. Lead with Curiosity Instead of Assumptions

One of the most dangerous things we can do is assume we fully understand someone else’s motives, thoughts, or intentions.

Often, what we perceive is incomplete.

Instead of leading with accusations, lead with curiosity:

  • “Help me understand…”
  • “Can we talk about what happened?”
  • “I may be misunderstanding this, but…”

Questions create space for dialogue.
Assumptions create defensiveness.

5. Stay Calm and Regulated

Hard conversations become destructive when emotions take control.

Emotionally intelligent leaders learn how to regulate themselves before responding impulsively.

That may mean:

  • Pausing before reacting
  • Taking a breath
  • Waiting until emotions settle
  • Choosing words carefully
  • Focusing on facts instead of personal attacks

Calm communication creates safety.
Escalation creates fear and defensiveness.

Your tone matters just as much as your words.

6. Focus on the Problem, Not the Person

Healthy accountability is not about attacking character.

It is about addressing behaviors, patterns, expectations, or misunderstandings in a constructive way.

Avoid statements like:

  • “You always…”
  • “You never…”
  • “This is just who you are…”

Instead, focus on specific situations and observable behaviors.

People are more likely to respond positively when they feel respected rather than condemned.

7. Protect the Relationship and the Culture

Every difficult conversation is shaping culture whether we realize it or not.

When leaders avoid problems, tolerate gossip, or communicate indirectly, teams begin to lose trust.

But when leaders model honesty, humility, respect, and accountability, healthy culture grows stronger.

Strong cultures are not conflict-free.
They are communication-rich.

The goal is not perfection.
The goal is trust.

Final Thoughts

Before reacting, pause and ask yourself:

Am I helping solve the problem, or am I becoming part of it?

Leadership is not just about vision, strategy, or influence.
It is also about courage.

The courage to communicate clearly.
The courage to listen humbly.
The courage to address tension directly and respectfully.

Speak directly.
Lead intentionally.
Protect the culture you say you value.

Happy Thursday culture builders,

-srt

Monday, May 25, 2026

Leaders talk to each other, not around each other.


Recently, I found myself caught in the middle of what felt like triangulation and honestly, my first response was reaction instead of reflection. I exploded. But after the emotions settled, I had to reset and ask myself a harder question.

Was this truly triangulation or was I allowing myself to be pulled into unhealthy communication patterns that required clearer boundaries and direct conversation?

That moment reminded me of something important.

Leaders talk to each other, not around each other.

Because when people stop communicating directly, trust erodes, division grows, and culture quietly begins to break down. This happens in friendships, nonprofits, businesses, and leadership teams every single day.

Real leadership does not recruit allies or fuel confusion.
It creates clarity, accountability, and trust.

Before reacting, pause and ask yourself:
Am I helping solve the problem or becoming part of it?

Speak directly.
Lead intentionally.
Protect the culture you say you value.

Happy Monday y’all,

-srt

#MondayMotivation #Leadership #LeadershipMatters #Communication #HealthyCulture #EmotionalIntelligence #Accountability #LeadershipDevelopment #ReaCoachingandConsulting

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Coaching Myself Back to Human: The Tools I Used to Return to Myself

Leadership isn’t proven in perfection ... it’s revealed in how we return to ourselves after we break.

And last Friday, I broke.

Not publicly in some dramatic explosion.
Not in a way that made headlines.
But internally, emotionally, spiritually I hit a wall.

What’s humbling is that just one day earlier, I had posted about leadership not being reactive.

Then exhaustion, criticism, emotional overload, and one difficult phone call collided at the exact wrong moment.

And suddenly the coach became the student again.

What this experience reminded me is that emotional intelligence is not about never reacting. It’s about learning how to recognize when you’ve emotionally left the room and finding your way back to yourself with honesty, accountability, and grace.

So how did I coach myself back to human?

Here are the tools that helped me.

1. I Stopped Trying to Be “The Strong One”

One of the coaching tools I constantly teach and had to remind myself of this week is the importance of self-awareness and energy management.

As an introvert, one of the most important things I can do is intentionally set aside time for me.

Quiet time.
Recovery time.
Processing time.
Rest.

But somewhere in the middle of all the leadership responsibilities, the fundraising events, the emotional labor, the networking, and the constant pouring into others… I stopped pouring back into myself.

One of the biggest lies leaders tell themselves is:
“I need to hold it together for everyone else.”

But eventually, emotional suppression becomes emotional exhaustion.

I had been carrying:
• conflict resolution
• organizational pressure
• community expectations
• nonstop events
• leadership visibility
• relationship management
• criticism
• emotional labor

And I never stopped long enough to ask:
“Am I okay?”

Coaching myself back to human started with honesty.

Not polished honesty.
Not leadership statement honesty.
Real honesty.

“I am overwhelmed.”
“I am exhausted.”
“I am hurt.”
“I do not have the emotional capacity I normally do.”

That awareness mattered.

Because you cannot regulate what you refuse to acknowledge.

2. I Remembered My Mom’s Rule

My mom has always said:

“When you’re exhausted, you need to rest. You don’t need to respond to the email. You don’t need to pick up the phone. What you need to do is rest.”

Whew.

That lesson hit differently this week.

Because exhaustion distorts perspective.

When we are depleted:
• criticism feels sharper
• conflict feels heavier
• emotions feel louder
• conversations feel more threatening than they are

And instead of resting, I reacted.

I answered emotionally when I should have paused spiritually.

One of the greatest coaching tools we can learn is this:

Not every emotion deserves immediate action.

Sometimes wisdom looks like silence.
Sometimes leadership looks like waiting.
Sometimes maturity looks like saying:

“I will revisit this conversation when I have rested.”

3. I Practiced Accountability Without Self Destruction

This part matters deeply to me.

I apologized to the people impacted by my emotional reaction.

Not because I’m weak.
Not because I’m taking ownership of everyone else’s behavior.
But because accountability is part of integrity.

I had to own the reality that my reaction became the catalyst for unnecessary confusion and emotional ripple effects.

But I also had to coach myself not to spiral into shame.

And there is a difference.

Healthy accountability says:

“I made a mistake.”

Toxic shame says:

“I am the mistake.”

Those are not the same thing.

As leaders, we have to learn how to take responsibility without emotionally crucifying ourselves in the process.

And you know what?

My beautiful friend sent me this message:

“Everything is good. Don’t worry. Everything will be okay and all of us have our moments. Let’s allow it to bring ourselves closer. Thank you for working it out for me. But I don’t feel like you need to apologize for having a human reaction.”

Wow.

Just typing those words makes me cry.

Why?

Because that was grace.

That was someone choosing compassion over condemnation.
That was someone loving me in the middle of my humanity instead of requiring perfection from me.

And honestly, I think that’s part of the lesson too.

Sometimes the people around us are far more willing to give us grace than we are willing to give ourselves.

As leaders, we often extend understanding to everyone except ourselves.

But healing begins when we finally believe we are worthy of the same compassion we so freely give away.

That moment reminded me that accountability and grace can exist together.

You can own your reaction and still deserve kindness.
You can apologize and still be loved.
You can have a hard moment and still be a good leader.

And maybe that’s what being human really is.

4. I Assumed Good Intentions

This was probably the hardest lesson.

Because when you feel hurt, exposed, or criticized, it’s easy to assign malicious intent to everyone involved.

But after sitting with the situation, I realized something important:

Not everyone who mishandles a moment is trying to harm you.

Sometimes people are simply imperfect humans trying to navigate difficult situations with limited tools.

The friend involved in my vulnerable conversation was not trying to betray me.

She was concerned.
She cared.
She was trying to seek guidance in a moment that felt heavy.

That realization softened me.

And honestly?

It healed something in me too.

One of the greatest emotional intelligence skills we can develop is learning to pause long enough to ask:

“Am I reacting to facts… or to fear?”

5. I Returned to My Identity

At the core of all of this was one final truth:

I had forgotten whose I am.

When criticism gets loud…
When exhaustion takes over…
When leadership pressure builds…
When emotions crack open…

It becomes very easy to root your identity in people’s opinions.  For me, as a Christian, I needed to remember that I am rooted in God’s truth.

So, I had to come back to center.

I am not one emotional moment.
I am not whispers.
I am not gossip.
I am not exhaustion.
I am not failure.

I am a child of God.

Still growing.
Still learning.
Still healing.
Still leading.
Still human.

And maybe that’s the real lesson.

Leadership is not about becoming superhuman.

It’s about learning how to stay human without losing yourself in the process.

Reflection Questions for Leaders

• Where am I emotionally exhausted but pretending I’m okay?
• Have I confused leadership with emotional self-sacrifice?
• Am I reacting from truth or from depletion?
• What conversations need rest before response?
• Where do I need accountability instead of shame?
• Have I assumed malicious intent where there may only be misunderstanding?
• What practices help me return to myself?

Final Reminder

Leadership isn’t proven in perfection.  It’s revealed in how we return to ourselves after we break.

Happy Thursday lovely leaders,

-srt


Tools Referenced in This Coaching Reflection

Emotional Intelligence

• Self awareness
• Emotional regulation
• Reflective processing
• Accountability practices
• Perspective taking
• Assuming good intentions

Leadership Coaching Tools

• Pause before response
• Rest as a leadership strategy
• Identity grounding
• Conflict reflection
• Self coaching questions
• Repair conversations
• Ownership without shame

Personal Leadership Practices

• Quiet time for introverts
• Emotional capacity awareness
• Boundary recognition
• Spiritual grounding
• Rest and recovery
• Journaling and reflection


#Leadership #LeadershipDevelopment #EmotionalIntelligence #SelfAwareness #AuthenticLeadership #WomenInLeadership #NonprofitLeadership #FaithAndLeadership #GrowthMindset #Accountability #PersonalGrowth #HealingJourney #HumanCenteredLeadership #ExecutiveCoaching #LeadershipCoach #MindsetShift #EmotionalWellness #MentalHealthAwareness #RestIsProductive #SelfCompassion #AssumeGoodIntentions #PurposeDrivenLeadership #ResilientLeadership #BurnoutRecovery #GraceAndGrowth #ChristianLeadership #IdentityInChrist #StillHuman #ReflectiveLeadership #MondayMotivation #ThursdayThoughts