by Judy M McCutcheon
In moments of ease, leadership can appear composed, thoughtful, even generous. It is under pressure — when timelines tighten, expectations collide, authority is questioned, or uncertainty enters the room — that something more instinctive takes over.
In those moments, leaders do not suddenly lose their values; rather, they default to the internal patterns that have been most rehearsed. The question is not whether pressure will come, but whether the leader recognises what happens internally when it does.
There is always a space between trigger and response. It may be brief, almost imperceptible, but it exists. In that space lives awareness — or its absence. It is here that leadership either becomes deliberate or reactive, grounded or protective. Most leaders are unaware of this space, not because they lack intelligence or experience, but because they have not been taught to notice what happens within them before they act.
The body often knows before the mind catches up.
A tightening in the chest. A quickening pace. A narrowing of focus. A sudden urgency to decide, to assert, to withdraw, to control. These are not failures of character; they are nervous system responses. Under perceived threat — whether that threat is reputational, relational, or professional — the body moves toward protection. And when leaders are unaware of this shift, protection can masquerade as leadership.
Decisiveness becomes rigidity. Efficiency becomes impatience. Authority becomes control. Silence becomes withdrawal. The leader may believe they are being clear or firm, while those around them experience something very different. Intention, however well-meaning, does not override internal state. People respond less to what leaders intend and more to what they embody.
This is why awareness matters more than intention.
Many leadership missteps do not come from poor values or lack of care, but from moments of activation that go unrecognised. A leader may intend to listen, but interrupt. Intend to empower, but micromanage. Intend to support, but shut down dissent. These gaps are rarely deliberate. They occur when the nervous system is leading, and awareness has stepped aside.
The most consequential leadership moments are often small. A reaction in a meeting. A tone in an email. A response — or lack of one — when something goes wrong. These moments accumulate. Over time, they shape culture, trust, and psychological safety far more than vision statements ever could. Teams learn quickly who a leader becomes under pressure. They adapt accordingly — sometimes by becoming quieter, more compliant, or more guarded.
Leaders who have not cultivated awareness often believe they are responding to the situation at hand. In reality, they are responding to the internal meaning they have attached to it. A challenge feels like disrespect. A question feels like doubt. A delay feels like a loss of control. The external event is neutral; the internal interpretation is not. And without awareness, interpretation becomes action.
This is where the work becomes uncomfortable.
To notice oneself in moments of activation requires a willingness to pause — not outwardly, but inwardly. To recognise when the body has shifted into defence. To acknowledge the urge to move quickly, to assert authority, to retreat, or to fix. And to ask, quietly and honestly: What is happening in me right now?
This is not about suppressing response or striving for constant calm. Regulation is not emotional flatness. It is the capacity to stay present with activation long enough to choose how to respond, rather than being compelled by habit. It is the difference between reacting automatically and acting deliberately. Between leadership driven by reflex and leadership shaped by awareness.
Over time, leaders who develop this capacity begin to experience pressure differently. Not as something that hijacks them, but as something that informs them. Activation becomes a signal rather than a command. The space between trigger and response widens. Choice re-enters. And with it comes steadiness.
This steadiness is felt immediately by others.
Meetings feel less charged. Conversations feel safer. Disagreement does not escalate as quickly. People take more risks — not because the leader has said it is safe to do so, but because their nervous system has learned that challenge will not be met with reactivity. Leadership, in this sense, becomes less about managing others and more about managing oneself.
What often goes unexamined is how portable this capacity is. The leader who cannot tolerate activation at work often struggles with it elsewhere as well. The patterns do not switch off at the end of the day. They show up in personal relationships, in moments of fatigue, in conflict with those closest to us. Inner work done only for professional performance remains incomplete. Inner work integrated into one’s way of being changes how one moves through the world.
This is not a call for constant self-monitoring or introspection. It is an invitation to familiarity — to know oneself well enough that activation is not surprising, and therefore not overwhelming. Leaders who know their internal patterns are less afraid of them. They are less likely to act them out unconsciously, and more able to hold their authority without hardening.
The most important leadership question is rarely asked out loud, yet it sits beneath many organisational challenges: Who am I when I’m activated, and do I recognise it in time?
There is no final answer to this question. It must be met repeatedly, across contexts and seasons. Leadership does not require the absence of triggers; it requires the awareness to meet them without being overtaken by them. The space between trigger and response is where leadership becomes conscious — or remains automatic.
And it is in that space, quietly, that the quality of leadership is decided.
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Judy McCutcheon is the CEO of Go Blue Consulting and a Certified Leadership and Trauma-Informed Coach.





















Thanks