The moment you feel like you “should” have all the answers is often the moment your growth starts to stall. We’re pushing back on that lie with a simple idea that can sharpen your personal life and your professional leadership: the quiet strength of staying a student.
We talk about how leadership gets twisted into performing certainty, and how that performance slowly kills curiosity. When we stop asking questions, stop taking notes, and stop admitting we don’t know, we don’t become more credible, we become more rigid. The leaders who inspire the most are still learning the most, and the brave phrase “I don’t know, teach me” doesn’t weaken authority, it deepens it. People don’t follow perfection; they follow growth, and growth requires the courage to be a beginner again.
We also dig into what continuous learning looks like in real life: reading, listening, finding mentors, getting a coach, and treating learning as something we get to do, not something we have to do. To make it practical, we close with three questions you can sit with today, designed to reignite a growth mindset, strengthen humility, and open new possibilities in how you lead and live. If this message hits home, subscribe, share it with a leader who needs it, and leave a review so more people can find the show.