Summary
Interrupting Automatic Patterns
Under pressure, leadership often becomes automatic. Not because leaders lack awareness — but because the nervous system defaults to familiar patterns when capacity is reduced.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how automatic stress patterns form, and why insight alone isn’t enough to change them. When stress accumulates, behaviour becomes faster, narrower, and more predictable — often before you realise it’s happening.
This video introduces a key leadership skill: interrupting patterns early, so choice and proportion return. The aim isn’t to stop stress. It’s to prevent stress from running the show.
In this lesson, you will:
- Understand how stress creates automatic leadership patterns
- Identify your most common default responses under pressure
- Learn why “trying to behave differently” doesn’t work under load
- Discover where small interruptions create the biggest shift
Reflection & Practice
This lesson is supported by a short worksheet to help you name your personal default patterns — without judgement. Once patterns are visible, they become interruptible.
How to use this lesson
Watch the video first without pausing. Then complete the worksheet in one sitting. You’re not trying to change anything yet. You’re learning where change becomes possible.
