Thursday, July 9, 2026

Actions Are the Truth

In early June, a friend said something so simple that I haven't stopped thinking about it.

"People show you who they are through their actions."

At the same time, I happened to be rereading The Let Them Theory by Mel Robbins. The two ideas seemed to fit together perfectly. Both are reminders that we spend far too much energy trying to explain, excuse, or change other people when, more often than not, their consistent actions have already given us the answer.

At first, I nodded and moved on. But over the weeks, I found myself replaying those words in different situations.

  • A missed commitment.
  • An unexpected act of kindness.
  • Someone who said all the right things but never followed through.
  • Someone else who rarely spoke about their character but quietly lived it every day.

It made me realize something both uncomfortable and freeing.

We spend an incredible amount of time listening to what people say. We analyze conversations, search for hidden meanings, and often give people the benefit of the doubt because we want to believe the best about them.

  • Yet actions rarely lie.
  • Actions reveal priorities.
  • Actions reveal values.
  • Actions reveal integrity.

Words tell us who someone wants to be. Actions tell us who they are today.

That doesn't mean people can't grow. We all have moments where our actions fall short of our intentions. Growth requires grace. But growth also requires accountability. If someone continually tells you one thing while consistently doing another, eventually you have to believe the evidence.

Yesterday, my mom made me laugh with an analogy I haven't been able to shake.

She said, "Some people are like a bad pancake. Burnt on one side but served with the golden-brown side up. They look good until you take a bite."

I laughed, but then I realized there was wisdom tucked inside her humor.

Over time, life has a way of flipping the pancake.

Consistent actions reveal what words and appearances often hide.

As I thought more about it, I realized this lesson extends far beyond our relationships with others.

It forces us to look inward.

  • What do my actions communicate?
  • If I say family comes first, does my calendar reflect that?
  • If I say I value my health, do my daily habits agree?
  • If I claim to be a leader, do my actions make others feel valued, heard, and empowered?
  • If I say faith is important, does the way I treat people reflect it?

Character isn't built in grand moments. It's revealed in ordinary ones.

It's found in the promises we keep when no one is watching.

        The emails we return.

                The encouragement we offer.

                        The apologies we make.

                                The commitments we honor.

The way we speak about people when they aren't in the room.

The encouraging part is this: actions are within our control.

If our actions haven't reflected the person we aspire to become, today is a new opportunity. We don't need a dramatic reinvention. We simply need the courage to align our behavior with our values, one decision at a time.

  • People are watching.
  • Our children are watching.
  • Our coworkers are watching.
  • Our friends are watching.

But most importantly, we are becoming the person our actions repeatedly reinforce.

So this week, pay less attention to impressive words and more attention to consistent behavior, both in others and in yourself.

Because in the end, actions don't just reveal character.

They create it.

Happy Thursday, all,

-srt


#ThursdayThought #Leadership #CharacterMatters #Integrity #PersonalDevelopment #EmotionalIntelligence #SelfReflection #AuthenticLeadership #ActionsSpeakLouderThanWords #ReaCoachingandConsulting

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