Summary
Stress and the Leadership System
Stress doesn’t just affect how leaders feel. It affects how leaders perceive, decide, and relate.
In this lesson, we move beneath behaviour and mindset to look at leadership through a physiological lens. You’ll learn how stress reorganises the nervous system — and why even experienced, well-intentioned leaders can become less clear, less patient, or less available under pressure.
This video introduces a critical reframe: when leadership struggles appear, the issue is often not capability — it’s capacity.
Understanding how stress changes your internal system removes blame and replaces it with practical insight. From there, coherent leadership becomes something you can build, not force.
In this lesson, you will:
- Understand stress as a physiological state, not a personal weakness
- Learn how stress narrows perception and shortens patience
- Recognise why “trying harder” often makes things worse
- Begin separating who you are from what stress does to your system
Reflection & Practice
This lesson is supported by a short awareness worksheet designed to help you recognise how stress shows up in your leadership system — before it turns into behaviour. The goal is not correction. It’s early recognition.
How to use this lesson
Watch the video first without pausing. Then complete the worksheet in one sitting. You’re building literacy in your own system — and that starts with noticing patterns, not fixing them.
