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There’s a season in leadership that almost nobody names.
It’s not burnout. It’s not failure. It’s not a loss of edge.
Everything still works.
You’re still capable. Still respected. Still producing at a high level.
And yet something about the way you’ve been operating no longer feels expansive.
In this episode of Project Joyful, we explore the quiet identity shift that happens when the strategies that built your success no longer feel like the way forward. Not because they stopped working. But because you’ve mastered them.
This is the corridor between identities.
The space where:
• You notice yourself thinking, “Why does it always have to be me?”
• You tighten back up and carry it anyway.
• You open your laptop on Sunday to “get ahead,” even though part of you wants to close it.
• You wonder if easing up means losing your edge.
We unpack:
This episode is not about doing less.
It’s about expanding your range.
When what used to work stops feeling expansive, it’s rarely because you’re losing your edge.
It’s usually because you’re ready to lead differently.
🎧 Listen if:
Next week: The Restoration Gap — what happens physiologically when you never fully step out of reinforcement mode, and why recovery is the missing piece in identity evolution.
By Tracy Tutty5
11 ratings
There’s a season in leadership that almost nobody names.
It’s not burnout. It’s not failure. It’s not a loss of edge.
Everything still works.
You’re still capable. Still respected. Still producing at a high level.
And yet something about the way you’ve been operating no longer feels expansive.
In this episode of Project Joyful, we explore the quiet identity shift that happens when the strategies that built your success no longer feel like the way forward. Not because they stopped working. But because you’ve mastered them.
This is the corridor between identities.
The space where:
• You notice yourself thinking, “Why does it always have to be me?”
• You tighten back up and carry it anyway.
• You open your laptop on Sunday to “get ahead,” even though part of you wants to close it.
• You wonder if easing up means losing your edge.
We unpack:
This episode is not about doing less.
It’s about expanding your range.
When what used to work stops feeling expansive, it’s rarely because you’re losing your edge.
It’s usually because you’re ready to lead differently.
🎧 Listen if:
Next week: The Restoration Gap — what happens physiologically when you never fully step out of reinforcement mode, and why recovery is the missing piece in identity evolution.