
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Jerry Colonna is the founder of Reboot and one of the most sought after CEO coaches in the world. Before he began coaching executives, Jerry was a burnt out VC, convinced that there must be a better way to impact the world—and also convinced that if he could influence the upper reaches of corporate structures, if he could help leaders heal, he could vastly improve the lives of all the employees. After all, he had observed the ripple effect of unhealed emotional wounds being taken out on other people—specifically people with less power. This is the focus of Jerry’s two great books about leadership: His first one is Reboot: Leadership and the Art of Growing Up and his second is Reunion: Leadership and the Longing to Belong, which takes a probing look at power and privilege and how it can alienate those who already don’t feel like they belong. In today’s conversation, we talk about all of this and specifically one of Jerry’s main queries. This passage is from Reunion: “While necessary, it’s not enough for us to do the inner work of unpacking our childhood wounds and, with fierce radical self-inquiry, free ourselves from the need to reenact the old stories of our pasts. Radical self-inquiry that stops at the question of how we have been complicit in creating the conditions we say we don’t want—a core tenet of my coaching and my book Reboot—is insufficient if it fails to look out to the world as it exists and ask how it could be better.”
MORE FROM JERRY COLONNA:
Reunion: Leadership and the Longing to Belong
Reboot: Leadership and the Art of Growing Up
Reboot Coaching
Follow Jerry on Instagram
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
By Elise Loehnen4.9
10431,043 ratings
Jerry Colonna is the founder of Reboot and one of the most sought after CEO coaches in the world. Before he began coaching executives, Jerry was a burnt out VC, convinced that there must be a better way to impact the world—and also convinced that if he could influence the upper reaches of corporate structures, if he could help leaders heal, he could vastly improve the lives of all the employees. After all, he had observed the ripple effect of unhealed emotional wounds being taken out on other people—specifically people with less power. This is the focus of Jerry’s two great books about leadership: His first one is Reboot: Leadership and the Art of Growing Up and his second is Reunion: Leadership and the Longing to Belong, which takes a probing look at power and privilege and how it can alienate those who already don’t feel like they belong. In today’s conversation, we talk about all of this and specifically one of Jerry’s main queries. This passage is from Reunion: “While necessary, it’s not enough for us to do the inner work of unpacking our childhood wounds and, with fierce radical self-inquiry, free ourselves from the need to reenact the old stories of our pasts. Radical self-inquiry that stops at the question of how we have been complicit in creating the conditions we say we don’t want—a core tenet of my coaching and my book Reboot—is insufficient if it fails to look out to the world as it exists and ask how it could be better.”
MORE FROM JERRY COLONNA:
Reunion: Leadership and the Longing to Belong
Reboot: Leadership and the Art of Growing Up
Reboot Coaching
Follow Jerry on Instagram
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

10,536 Listeners

825 Listeners

3,322 Listeners

1,857 Listeners

10,157 Listeners

12,727 Listeners

2,503 Listeners

984 Listeners

6,765 Listeners

3,306 Listeners

319 Listeners

86 Listeners

1,262 Listeners

5,118 Listeners

763 Listeners

601 Listeners

674 Listeners

3,462 Listeners

41,556 Listeners

388 Listeners

243 Listeners

88 Listeners

118 Listeners

1,894 Listeners

115 Listeners

1,186 Listeners

624 Listeners

87 Listeners

452 Listeners

46 Listeners

140 Listeners

67 Listeners

23 Listeners

30 Listeners