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There was a moment when I was a new business owner, after the revenue had climbed, the systems were humming, and the team was in place, when I realized I had built everything I said I wanted. And yet, I couldn’t step away without a quiet wave of panic.
Not because I thought it would all collapse, but because I knew I’d return to a dozen micro-decisions, three unresolved problems, and questions that waited, only for me.
My team wasn’t stuck. They were orbiting around me.
Because I had trained them to.
Most founders start by instinct. Grit. Adrenaline. It works, especially in the early stages when nearly every decision does depend on you.
But here’s what grit never tells you: That instinct doesn’t fade when your company scales. It myelinates. And if you’re not careful, it becomes the silent engine running the whole system.
Even when the structure grows strong, your team can stay looped around your cues. They’re capable to make decisions on their own, but still looking to you for direction, approval, permission.
So the weight never leaves.
The brain rewards shortcuts. And if your team learned that going through you gets faster results? That loop gets reinforced—literally.
Myelin wraps around those well-traveled neural paths in their brain, speeding up the “ask the boss” reflex. So no matter how many playbooks or processes you’ve built, the orbit doesn’t shift until the wiring does.
And when you finally try to hand things off? The unfamiliar triggers hesitation. The amygdala flares. The team pauses.
And suddenly, you’re back at the center, smoothing, solving, answering.
You don’t lead differently just by deciding to. You lead differently by rewiring how attention flows.
That means:
Slowing down the reflex to solve.
Pausing before jumping in.
Letting small fires burn, on purpose, so your team learns they can put them out without you.
It also means anchoring your culture in clarity, not control. And being okay when someone solves something differently than you would have, because ownership matters more than perfection.
You created the team. You carried the weight. But now it’s time to model a new kind of leadership with the help of a female business coach. Not as a bottleneck, but as an anchor.
That’s when the business becomes what you meant for it to be. Not a tether to your nerve system...
But a vehicle for your vision.
Dr Barbara
I write more about this in Two Streets Named Hard, especially Chapter 6, where I unpack what it means to lead without micromanaging, and the brain-based patterns that make true freedom possible.
Already reading? Post a review on Amazon, then reply or email me. I will send you an invite to my private book club (free, as long as you leave a review). We meet each week to apply these truths to your unique situation, and you will have space to ask me questions, too. I look forward to seeing you there!
There comes a point when strategy isn’t enough. When the only way forward is full alignment. Instead of chasing more, pivoting to reclaiming
what matters most: Peace. Purpose. Presence. This comes from building a business that rises with you, instead of resting on you. If that’s the
shift that you’re craving too, YOU’RE NOT ALONE. You’re in the right place. Let’s start your transformation and build what last
Start Here
There comes a point when strategy isn’t enough. When the only way forward is full alignment. Instead of chasing more, pivoting to reclaiming
what matters most: Peace. Purpose. Presence. This comes from building a business that rises with you, instead of resting on you. If that’s the
shift that you’re craving too, YOU’RE NOT ALONE. You’re in the right place. Let’s start your transformation and build what last