You got promoted because you’re sharp. You hit your numbers. You delivered. So they handed you a team.
Now most days feel like reacting instead of leading. Someone questions you in a meeting and you snap. A project goes sideways and you shut down. You go home drained because the whole day was firefighting, and if you’re honest, it feels like everything around you is in control, not you.
Here’s what you need to hear: that’s not a character flaw. That’s biology.
When your brain detects a threat, real or perceived, your amygdala floods you with adrenaline and cortisol in milliseconds. Faster than your thinking brain can catch up. Your first reaction isn’t leadership. It’s survival.
But leadership shows up in what you do next. The best leaders don’t eliminate that surge. They learn to pause inside of it.
That’s where the P.A.U.S.E. framework comes in. A simple tool you can use in your next hard meeting to interrupt the reaction long enough to choose your response. Because anyone can react in a second. Leaders build trust through the pattern they create after the moment.
You don’t control every situation. You always control your response.
That’s where your leadership lives. Start there.