This might resonate.
There’s a certain type of person who can walk into any room and immediately feel what’s going on.
You notice the undercurrents.
You pick up on what’s unspoken.
You can sense when something’s off — even if no one else can name it yet.
This is a real skill.
It’s part of what makes you thoughtful, intuitive, and good at what you do.
But there’s a shadow side to it that doesn’t get talked about very much.
When you’re the one who sees everything, you often become the one who carries everything.
You anticipate needs before they’re voiced.
You adjust so others don’t have to.
You hold the emotional weight so things can keep moving.
In business, this can quietly show up as:
- taking responsibility for outcomes that aren’t actually yours
- over-delivering to appease
- discounting because you believe they’re doing “really meaningful work”
- staying in situations longer than you should because you “understand”
Over time, it creates a kind of exhaustion that’s hard to explain.
Not burnout, exactly. More like a constant hum of responsibility.
What I’ve learned — in my own work and with clients — is that this isn’t a flaw.
It’s an operating pattern.
And until you can see your pattern clearly, it’s very hard to change how it plays out.
If any of this feels familiar, this helps you understand how you tend to lead, decide, and carry responsibility — especially under pressure.
That’s why I created a simple assessment.
Not to box you in.
Not to label you.
But to give you context.
Because once you understand your default way of operating, you can start building a business that supports you — instead of constantly drawing from you.
→ You can explore the assessment here
You don’t need to carry everything to be effective.
You’re allowed to be supported too.
