The clock on the wall is ticking, but in the silence of your kitchen, it sounds like a hammer. It’s 2:00 AM. You are staring at a spreadsheet or a community proposal, and the steam stopped rising from your mug an hour ago. Your back is tight, carrying the weight of everyone’s expectations: your board, your family, the youth looking up to you. You feel that sharp pull in your chest, and a voice whispers, “Who are you kidding? You are just a tired person playing a part. Maybe the struggle is just our portion.”
You feel it in your bones. You carry it in your spirit. You wonder when the breakthrough comes. That heaviness? We need to call it what it is. That is pain, and pain is a signal that you are doing something hard, but that voice telling you that you are broken, or not a real leader? That is a story we choose to believe. We think our thoughts are the gospel truth, but the reality is that your brain is processing 11 million bits of information every second, yet your conscious mind only catches about 50 bits, barely a single sentence.
“If the world is a storm, your beliefs are the only anchor you’ve got.”
For us, the cost of believing the wrong story is too high. When we label ourselves as burnt out or incapable, we are building a cage. This is called identity foreclosure. It’s like looking at a map and forgetting that you are the traveler, not the paper. If you believe the struggle is a sign of your failure, you will quit at the 15-minute mark, long before your strength is actually gone, and family, we know that while sticking with it does not always guarantee the win, quitting is the only thing that guarantees the loss.
It is your responsibility to change the filter.
Your brain was not designed to make you a visionary; it was designed to keep you alive and doing exactly what you have always done because safe feels better than new. It would rather you stay stuck in a familiar struggle than risk a new kind of success. This is why those autopilot habits fail us; they try to skip the heart-work required to actually shift your perspective.
“So, how do we move the mountain? We start with the turnaround.”
Next time that voice says, “I’m not strong enough to carry this community,” don’t fight it. Sit with it, give it a seat at the table, and ask it these four questions:
- Is it true?
- Can I be absolutely sure it’s true?
- How do I treat my people (and myself) when I believe this thought?
- Who would I be if this thought didn’t exist?
Then, flip the script. What if the opposite is the real truth? Instead of “I am overwhelmed,” try “I am being stretched into a greater version of myself.” Beliefs are tools, not truths. If a hammer is not helping you build the house your ancestors dreamed of, put it down and pick up a saw.
We are all just babies who got bigger, doing the best we can with the tools we were given. If your tools are rusty, if your self-talk is cutting you down, change them. Give yourself grace. Give your community the benefit of the doubt, because love is measured by that very grace.
Take a breath. You are still here. Now, let’s get back to work.