Monthly Archives: July 2025

4 posts

A Conversation About Reflection and Why the World Needs Leaders Who Can Hold Silence

In a world obsessed with action, reflection can feel like a luxury.

It is not. It is a necessity — for grounded leadership, for clear seeing, and for sustaining wise action.

Reflection is not self-monitoring or second-guessing. It is a practice of noticing, of tending inner landscapes so that our outward expressions arise from greater clarity and congruence.

Leaders who model reflection create spaces where thoughtful action becomes normal, where pause is valued, and where reaction is softened by awareness.

In this Conversation, we’ll consider Reflection as a leadership rhythm.


The Importance of Pause Practicing:

How often have you started your day before sun-up and by the time you closed the last email, finished the last call, or put the dot on the last page of the report realize it’s a few hours past a reasonable time for dinner?

How often have you been in the office, felt like you blinked, and hours had passed?

It’s not that we’re working harder. If you laughed at that, I get it, I really do! But hear me out:

If we went back a handful of decades, people relied not on their mobile phone alarms to get them up in the morning. They were up with the sun (or the crowing of a rooster, or the bustle of the dog or cat) and finished their work day around sun down or so.

Sure, that sounds like a farming analogy. My grandmother swore by The Farmer’s Almanac, and it seemed like not just for her gardening. She was born in 1898 and believed in the saying, “early to bed, early to rise”.

Throughout her days, she visited her same-age friends, checked in on neighbors, participated with her social groups, and did things retired women do. However, she always took time for herself, to sit quietly on the porch or in an Adirondack chair in the backyard.

To sit quietly …

How often in the midst of our busy-ness, do we pause?

It’s important.

It’s like breathing with intention.

Breathing just happens, sure. But when we ground ourselves in the practice of breathing, the action doesn’t just involve one “motion” — it’s not all inhale or all exhale. It’s not continuous both but there are pauses.

Try taking a deep but natural slow breath in. Notice how there’s a pause at the top of the breath, just before the exhale.

That’s the feeling of intentional breathing. It’s a good practice to have. It helps ground that daily rhythm.

This intentional breathing can also be useful as part of a reflective pause practice. Before making a big decision, before that one-to-one conversation with a challenged team member, before meeting with the person we report to, reflective pauses help us think things through.


Holding Silence:

Another couple times that lend to reflective pausing is first thing in the morning and before going to sleep at night.

When we wake up, our mind is like the empty sponge, ready to soak up the day. Before the hectic overdrive kicks in of getting off to work, perhaps getting children in order or older relatives sorted, taking time to breathe and consider helps us begin with purpose and organization.

People might use the morning when they first get up or as the last thing they concentrate on before bed for spiritual practice. Or, they might be working on a project and spend that time, thinking about possible next steps. I’ve done that at night and in the morning, I have a clearer vision on my next steps.

Cultivating reflection that deepens outward expression, not just self-monitoring.

Understanding our inner thought life allows us to assess our authentic self and how what we’re working on aligns with that self.

We can then walk into our workspace, the community, or with our family or friends in ways that allow us to model reflective practice.

Here are two meeting scenarios:

In Meeting A, the conversation is constant and, dare I say, frenzied. People talk over each other, answers come before the questions are finished, and the leader bellows over everyone or says nothing and lets the team burn out their energy, then offers a “solution”. Members of the team walk away from the table, feeling unheard, ignored, or maybe supported and valued because their answer was chosen or at least similar enough to the leader’s recommendation.

In meeting B, the leader encourages conversation but ensures everyone has their turn without anyone over-talking anyone else. This leader asks for solutions when challenges are presented. They might answer a question with a question (“What do you think about that?“) or leave space for others to answer. They check in with those who might not speak up. Multiple solutions are the order of the day. Team member leave the room, encouraged to continue the conversation and to bring other ideas.

The leader in Meeting B takes time to hold silence and managers to slow the reactive loop that sometimes develops in team engagement.

And it all begins with reflection.

Take some time for yourself, for reflection. What does a time of reflection, of intention, look like for you? How does reflection look in your personal and professional practices?

If you don’t take time now, how might you start doing so in future?

If you’d like to explore this path, let’s connect…

Your Journey Sentinal, Andree

A Sidebar Conversation about Leaders and Leadership

When we hear the word leader, many of us think of someone at the front of a room.
A CEO. A principal. A director with a polished speech.

But leadership, in its truest form, arises first from within.

Leadership begins as self-leadership — the way we are in relationship with our own inner life, the authenticity we cultivate, and the presence we bring into the spaces we inhabit.

In our last Conversation, we touched on the importance of relationship. We’ll also talk about reflection, renewal, and resonance. Each of these begins with an inner rhythm — with how we move through our own being before we extend outward to connect with others.

Leadership, at its heart, is one series of these inner rhythms.

The Leader’s Pathway:

Leadership begins in our relationship to self — how we tend our patterns, notice our needs, honor our rhythms.

From there, we cultivate an authentic self that we can bring forward — not as performance, but as presence.

And it is through this authentic presence that we engage the world outside ourselves — through an external self that is attuned, relational, and capable of fostering spaces where others can thrive.

This is the rhythm of leadership held here in the practice of cReative Leadership.

And here is an important truth: We are all leaders.

Leadership is not limited to those with formal titles. It is not reserved for those in positions of power.

We lead in every moment where we offer presence, foster possibility, or create space for others to rise.

Parents lead. Peers lead. Artists lead. Caregivers lead. Even the quietest voice in the room may lead — through the resonance it creates, the steadiness it holds, or the invitation it offers.

Leadership is relational — it arises when we are in right relationship with ourselves and others.


One of my favorite reminders of this truth comes from science fiction — Larry Niven’s Ringworld.

Niven writes about a race known for their flight and resilience, called the Puppeteers.

The Puppeteers are led not by the boldest or most visible, but by one called The Hindmost — they also call this leader the One Who Leads from Behind.

In a culture shaped by caution and care, The Hindmost embodies a truth we often forget: that leaders as people and leadership as function need not always be at the front. Sometimes it is the unseen hand, the one who tends direction quietly, creating conditions for others to move and flourish.

We all have opportunities to lead — often in ways that do not resemble the images we are handed of what a “leader” should look like.

Self-leadership is where this begins.

If you’d like to explore the idea of self-leadership more deeply, you may find reflections in works such as:

As we journey in cReative Leadership, let’s begin with the understanding that being a leader looks different for each of us.

Next, hold to the recognition that leadership is an inner practice first — one that shapes how we move through the spaces we inhabit, and how we invite others to move with us.

You are welcome to continue these Conversations here — in a space where leadership is expansive, relational, and human. Next time, we’ll return from the sidebar to consider the importance and influence of Reflection.

Your Journey Sentinal, Andree

A Conversation about Relationship

Relationship is the ground from which everything grows. Before we consider our leadership outward, we begin with our relationship to our own life — to our patterns, our narratives, our needs.

From there, we can bring forward an authentic self that others experience not as performance, but as presence.

And in leadership, how we enter relationship matters more than how we manage outcomes. Spaces where mutual trust and permission are cultivated become spaces where genuine collaboration can take root.

In this Conversation, we’ll explore Relationship as a leadership quality — first within, then between.


How do we understand our relationship to our own life?

Have you ever looked at yourself, in the eye, in a mirror? Like really look yourself in the eye — not the casual glance to straighten a scarf or even the practiced (dare I say automatic) look while shaving or applying a face? Try it.

Take two minutes to sit in front of a mirror and look yourself in the eye. Recognize what you see there.

Inner and Authentic Self:

Are you connected to the space around you? Have you ever considered how your feet feel on the floor or the way the cotton of your shirt swishes against your skin?

What about emotionally and spiritually? When was the last time you thought about your self, the you that’s more than skin and bone?

Some of us never think about the part of us that’s inside, that’s our Center.

We’re missing a vital component to deeper understanding of how we “tick”. We are missing an understanding of our own patterns, needs, and tendencies.

When we don’t recognize and get to know the self that sits behind those eyes staring back at us in the mirror, how can we come into meaningful relationship with anyone else?

Sure, maybe you’re thinking, “Well, I’m not at work to build relationship but to build a team, to get the work done!”

Here’s the truth: we cannot work meaningfully without having a connection to the people around us, to the people working with us each day.

And here’s another truth: it’s possible to carry the authentic relationship we have with ourselves outward — into our work and relationships — without losing its clarity or integrity.

Leader and External Self:

There’s an adage that we often spend more time with work colleagues than we do with the people who are in closer proximity due to familial, faith, or community connection.

Leadership is not a title or a role reserved for those in charge. It is a way of being in relationship with those around us — whether we’re a CEO, a mentor, a volunteer, a parent, or a colleague on a team.

Imagine being around people for hours on end, who you have no connection with …

Seems rather bleak, doesn’t it?

And many of us do that: we go to our offices or log into our workspace and never give much thought to the people around us.

Reading those words is sobering and it stems from somewhere.

We are people, in relationship with ourselves first. If we don’t cultivate knowledge of our Center, knowledge of our interior self, we won’t be able to build relationship with others. Without this ability to know self and to see that others are on a journey, too, we fall short of genuine connection.

When leaders foster genuine connections with those around them, they can reach levels of innovation and creativity far beyond what can be attained with superficial engagement.

Becoming a leader who is aware of their internal and external self means moving from “transactional” relationships to spaces of mutual nourishment and permission. And with intention, we can do that.

It begins by tending our relationship with self — and by recognizing that every genuine relationship we build outward begins there.


If this conversation resonated with you, I invite you to hold that feeling. In the coming conversations, I’d like to invite you to begin exploring your own Center …

We’ll engage with the idea of Reflection soon, but first, let’s dig a bit more into this idea of leadership.

Your Journey Sentinal, Andree

Introduction: Conversations about the Four R’s

There are so many ways to talk about leadership: in terms of competencies, goals, or metrics. We might describe it as “leadership”, “management”, or both. Or neither …

But leadership, at its root, is something more human. It has layers.

In this space, I hold to four R’s as quiet companions in the practice of cReative Leadership: Relationship, Reflection, Renewal, and Resonance.

They are not steps. They are not a model. They are ways of being — inner and outer — that invite us to lead with greater presence, integrity, and depth.

In the coming Conversations, I’ll offer a reflection on each. You may find they echo your own path already. Or they may call you toward a new way of tending your leadership.

Your Journey Sentinel, Andree