Silent
Silent provides the tools for seekers to recognize their path and enables self-reliance for spiritual and magickal growth.
Seekers gain insight from his work and find their inner calm from his ability to listen and help others reflect.

For three years, I was a well-coached CEO.
Frameworks. Assessments. 360s. A good executive coach who held me accountable to the right behaviors. I was, by most measures, getting better at the job.
And yet something wasn't moving.
My team was performing. The business was growing. But in the moments that mattered most , board pressure, leadership conflict, high-stakes decisions , I kept noticing a version of myself I didn't fully trust. Reactive when I wanted to be steady. Certain when the situation called for curiosity. Performing composure rather than having it.
I didn't have the language for what was wrong. I just knew the coaching I had wasn't reaching it.
What I actually needed , and couldn't name:
I needed someone to help me see what was driving my behavior under pressure, not just change it. My tactics were fine. My internal operating system was running on assumptions I hadn't examined in a decade.
I needed to get honest about what I was avoiding. Not in a therapeutic sense, in a practical one. Avoidance has a cost in organizations. It shows up as delayed decisions, cloudy communication, and a leadership presence that the team can feel but no one says out loud.
I needed to learn the difference between conviction and rigidity. I had been confusing them for years. So had my board. So had my team.
I needed my presence to become an asset rather than a variable. The best leaders I'd watched had something I can only describe as settledness, a quality that made the people around them more capable. I wanted that. I didn't know how to develop it.
What changed:
Six months in, my leadership team reported, unprompted, that I was more present and less reactive under pressure. That data came from an engagement survey I didn't design and didn't expect.
A VP who had been quietly considering leaving stayed. She told me later it was the shift in my presence that changed her calculus. That one outcome alone was worth more than the engagement cost.
My board communication improved , not because my slides got better, but because the clarity underneath the slides became real rather than performed. Board members started responding differently. Less challenge, more alignment. I hadn't changed my position on anything. I had changed how I held it.
And the decisions got cleaner. Faster to the essential question. Less noise in the room between a situation and my response to it.
What I'd tell another CEO:
If your leadership development is making you more knowledgeable but not more settled, you may be working at the wrong level.
The interior work is not soft. In my experience, it is the hardest and most leveraged work a CEO can do. And most of us don't do it because we don't have a category for it and nobody around us is talking about it honestly.
I'm talking about it now because one peer conversation changed my trajectory. Maybe this is yours.
Ask Lawrence to pull up a chair beside you.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Silent
Silent provides the tools for seekers to recognize their path and enables self-reliance for spiritual and magickal growth.
Seekers gain insight from his work and find their inner calm from his ability to listen and help others reflect.



