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  <title>Episode 12 - The Pressure and Peace of Leadership: Put on Your Oxygen Mask First</title>
  <description>As leaders, we must accept the fact that pressure applied by internal and external forces is a given.&amp;amp;nbsp; If we set out with the mindset of trying to make it go away, we will be sorely disappointed.&amp;amp;nbsp; But does this pressure have to consume our lives?&amp;amp;nbsp; Rather, can we find ways to live with the pressure and maybe even turn it into an opportunity for growth? Bad days, mistakes, and poor decisions can and will happen; period.&amp;amp;nbsp; But one way to reduce the pressure associated with our leadership hiccups is to establish relationships based on trust.&amp;amp;nbsp; When trusting relationships are forged and cultivated, those with whom we relate most often are more inclined to extend a little grace on those rough days or provide us with a little slack on the heels of a poor decision.&amp;amp;nbsp; Just as we set out to see the best in them; because they trust us, they are more inclined to see the best in us.&amp;amp;nbsp; While this is not a free pass to continue making mistakes or stringing together poor decisions one after another, it applies some peace to leadership on the days when we aren’t at our best.&amp;amp;nbsp; Another way we as leaders can apply peace to the daily pressures is to practice self-awareness.&amp;amp;nbsp; Understanding where we excel and where we struggle sets us up to be more deliberate and less reactionary when it comes to our self-improvement.&amp;amp;nbsp; Pressure can mount in the face of the unknown or the unaware.&amp;amp;nbsp; Yet, understanding limitation and areas of weakness, and making a conscious effort to improve in those areas, is key in our ability to achieve peace.&amp;amp;nbsp; Of course, none of this is possible without a willingness to be vulnerable.&amp;amp;nbsp; When we constantly send the message that we can succeed on our own; not only do we keep the pressure on ourselves, we send a message to our followers that they, too, can’t be vulnerable.&amp;amp;nbsp; Furthermore, we actually maintain or even increase the pressure when we miss opportunities to learn and grow.&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp; Once we’ve established trusting relationships and acknowledged we can’t go it alone, it’s time to ask for help.&amp;amp;nbsp; Effective leaders apply peace through the use of support systems.&amp;amp;nbsp; They create networks of people who possess different skill sets, employ different perspectives, and are capable of delivering critical feedback.&amp;amp;nbsp; Some leaders who feel this is counterintuitive to establishing peace may actually do the opposite and stock their networks with like-minded people.&amp;amp;nbsp; While this lack of pushback may seem like it drives peace; such peace is temporary.&amp;amp;nbsp; Real peace is achieved when we expand our thinking, our skill set, and our overall learning; putting us in a stronger position to handle different forms of pressure. While leadership pressure is real, peace is attainable if we are willing to look for it.&amp;amp;nbsp; &amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp; </description>
  <author_name>Leadership Insight with Rising Sun</author_name>
  <author_url>http://risingsun.libsyn.com/website</author_url>
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