You’re not unqualified. You know that.
People around you — less talented, less prepared — move ahead. Get promoted. Start things. And something in you keeps pulling back.
It’s not laziness. Not the simple version of imposter syndrome. It’s something in the body. Almost physical. It shows up every time you’re about to step into something bigger.
A Decision Made Before You Knew
Somewhere before age ten, you watched what happened to someone in your family who became visible.
Your father’s success destroyed the family. Your mother’s talent was told to be smaller. A sibling stood out and was punished. You stood out and were told, subtly, that it wasn’t safe.
Your nervous system made a calculation: visibility is dangerous. The safest version of me is the smaller one.
That decision — made by a child trying to survive — is still running your career.
The Man Who Kept Almost Succeeding
A senior executive. Brilliant. Built things to 80% and stepped back. Every time.
Underneath: his father had been successful and lost everything publicly. The family never recovered.
He’d learned that the last 20% is where destruction happens. Getting close was fine. Arriving was catastrophic.
He wasn’t lacking ambition. He was protecting himself from a disaster that already happened — to someone else, decades ago.
If You Recognise This
Goals, accountability systems, and performance coaches have value. But if the thing underneath is “visibility equals danger,” no surface strategy overrides it.
It has to be seen first.
Ready to see what's holding you back?
The pattern running your career can be named — and once it's named, it can shift.