There’s a way leadership can slowly shift without you noticing.
At first, it feels grounded.
You’re responsible.
You’re reliable.
You’re emotionally aware.
But over time, something tightens.
You start managing yourself more than inhabiting yourself.
Monitoring your tone.
Holding your reactions.
Staying composed even when something inside you feels strained.
And you call it professionalism.
Or maturity.
Or emotional intelligence.
But internally, it feels like subtle effort.
Like you’re always slightly braced.
Slightly alert.
Slightly ahead of your own feelings.
Not because you’re anxious.
But because you’ve learned that leadership requires control.
So you lead from regulation, not from presence.
From composure, not from connection.
And that works.
Until it doesn’t.
Because tension-based leadership never actually feels restful.
It feels stable, but not supported.
Strong, but not soft.
There’s a difference between being regulated and being relaxed.
Between holding yourself together and feeling at home in yourself.
You might sit gently with this:
Where do I feel effort in how I lead?
What am I managing instead of inhabiting?
What would leadership feel like if it came from ease instead of control?
Because leadership that feels sustainable
doesn’t require constant self-monitoring.
It feels like being inside yourself
instead of holding yourself in place.