Leadership Doesn’t Bend You
Sometimes you have an idea of how you believe something should be.
Your idea, however, is much grander than reality.
Because you don't want to give up on the grandness of that vision, you start to twist yourself into a pretzel—and do things that aren't really you to see if you can make what you want come to life.
People do this with relationships, their career or business path, and their God-given mission.
Looking at something and accepting it for what it is takes massive amounts of courage.
In a world that will give you a free pass if you make excuses for your behavior rather than encouraging you to look in the mirror, I see this path more times than I'd ever thought I would.
Someone recently asked me why most folks find accountability inherently difficult.
He was looking for someone to hold him accountable, and realized that no one in his friend circle had the strength or capacity to do it.
After a long pause, I shared with him that if someone were to hold you accountable for your behavior, they'd have to look at and acknowledge their own shortcoming and missteps.
It's just easier to ignore what you're doing, so they don't have to look at what they're doing.
Long ago, I made a pact with myself that I wanted people in my life who were committed to honest, transparent dialogue.
Over the past several decades, this has served me well—even when it hasn't been comfortable.
I'm not looking for a free pass.
Leadership is challenging, sometimes messy, and always uncomfortable.
Most folks just aren't interested in signing up for something that doesn't have them feel good 24x7.
When I got clear on the 7 Pillars of God-Centered Leadership, it was like something shifted in me.
I got that when I walked this path and took this journey, I didn't need to twist myself into a pretzel or spend time worrying about what other people thought about me.
As long as my heart is right with God, leadership is about His way, not mine.
ACTION: The Upside Challenge for the week is to write down the qualities that would earn someone the right to speak into your life.
Focus on who they are and not what they do.
Choose qualities anchored in truth, integrity, humility, and alignment with your Divine mission.
Then pause and look at your list honestly.
Let your life rise to meet what you say you value.










