When the Leader Stops Looking Up
One of the quiet realities of entrepreneurship is that businesses often become reflections of the emotional and mental state of the people leading them.
There is a moment that arrives in many entrepreneurial journeys that often goes unnoticed.
Nothing dramatic has happened. The business has not suddenly doubled in size. There has been no breakthrough announcement or overnight success. Externally, very little may appear to have changed at all.
Yet internally, something is different.
The entrepreneur begins to see again.
For a long time their attention may have been consumed by the immediate demands of business. Problems need to be solved. Responsibilities needed to be carried. Deadlines arrived one after another. The focus became surviving the week, the month, the season. The larger vision that once inspired the journey gradually disappeared behind the realities of running a business.
This is not unusual.
Most entrepreneurs experience periods where they become so immersed in the day-to-day operation of their business that they lose sight of why they started in the first place. The dream becomes a job. The vision becomes a task list. The future becomes something to worry about rather than something to create.
Yet quieter seasons have a way of creating space for perspective.
When the constant noise begins to settle, entrepreneurs are often given an opportunity to step back and view their journey from a different vantage point. They begin to recognise how much they have learned, how much they have overcome, and how much they have grown. More importantly, they begin to realise that the future is not limited to what exists today.
The challenges that once felt like barriers start to look like lessons. The setbacks that once felt permanent begin to reveal the growth they created. What seemed like lost time often becomes valuable preparation.
Slowly, possibility returns.
Not as excitement alone, but as clarity.
The entrepreneur starts to reconnect with the reason they chose this path. They remember that they were never meant to simply maintain what already exists. They chose entrepreneurship because they wanted to build, create, contribute, and expand. They chose a path that required growth because somewhere within them was a desire to become more than they were yesterday.
This is the gift hidden within every season of reflection.
When we pause long enough to honestly assess ourselves, we do not simply gain a better understanding of where we have been. We begin to see where we could still go.
And perhaps that is the true power of renewed vision.
Not that it changes the circumstances overnight.
But it allows us to lift our eyes beyond them.
The horizon that once seemed distant becomes visible again, and with it comes the quiet reminder that there is still more to create, more to learn, more to become, and more possibilities ahead than behind.
Sue Leppan is a life, transformation and holistic wellness coach based in Sandbaai, Hermanus. Providing therapy for a range of challenges, Sue specialises in targeting and dealing with emotional trauma, self-doubt, depression, stagnation and self-centring. Whether you need help with personal issues ...
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