There is a moment every leader knows.
A quiet, private moment where the pressure rises and you tell yourself:
Push a little further.
Get through this stretch.
Rest on the other side.
It sounds responsible.
It sounds like commitment.
It sounds like leadership.
Until the body starts telling a different story.
Episode 1 of Unlearning Leadership: The 12 Myths We Inherited dismantles the first and most seductive myth in modern leadership — the Myth of Endurance. The belief that stamina is a strategy. That effort is infinite. That your nervous system will simply comply with whatever you demand of it.
It won’t.
And the moment it stops cooperating is rarely dramatic. That’s what makes this myth so costly. It doesn’t announce itself. It erodes quietly, steadily, in the background — while you keep performing, keep delivering, keep telling yourself you’ll recover on the other side.
What you'll discover in this episode
- Why endurance is the most dangerous leadership myth you’ve been taught
- The internal operating system every leader has (but rarely manages)
- Why you keep overriding your body — and what it’s actually costing you
- How the pace you model becomes the pace your team inherits
- Why a holiday isn’t the same as recovery
- The physiology your leadership depends on — and what you’re likely ignoring
- Three tools to interrupt, understand, and rebuild your rhythm
The myth hiding in plain sight
Endurance has excellent PR.
It’s dressed up as grit, resilience, and strength. Celebrated in boardrooms. Baked so deeply into leadership culture that most people never think to question it.
But what the myth never tells you is that biology has a different opinion.
When you override fatigue — which most high-performing leaders do routinely — you are not demonstrating resilience. You are drawing down from a biological account that has limits.
The nervous system is not a limitless resource. It is a living system that requires input, recovery, and rhythm to function at the level your leadership demands.
The problem is that we have been taught to read performance as a signal of health. If we’re still functioning, we must be fine.
But functioning and being well are not the same thing.
Coping and capacity are not the same thing.
And the gap between them is where leadership quietly contracts.
“Endurance feels like strength — until the very moment it becomes self-extraction.” — Elizabeth Hughes
The cost no one names
There is a particular kind of leader Elizabeth has come to know well.
The leader who is still delivering results.
Still meeting the demands.
Still holding the room.
And yet — quietly feeling the cost.
In their clarity.
In their rhythm.
In the slow erosion of the conditions that once made leading feel natural and grounded.
It’s not a dramatic collapse. It’s a familiar heaviness. A sense that the things they’ve always done are no longer working in the way they once did.
That is the moment a leader has crossed the invisible line — the one where endurance stops being a strength and starts becoming a liability.
The pace your team is inheriting
There is a dimension to endurance culture that rarely gets named — and it is perhaps the most consequential.
The pace a leader keeps doesn’t stay with them.
It travels. It moves through the team, through the culture, through every unspoken signal sent about what is expected, what is normal, and what it means to lead well here.
When a leader models relentless pace without visible recovery, that pace becomes the standard. Teams learn to perform it too — not because they have been told to, but because leadership is inherently mimetic.
People watch. People calibrate. And over time, what the leader embodies becomes what the culture requires.
This is not about blame. Most leaders absorbed this pattern from the leaders who shaped them. But it does mean that regenerative leadership is never only personal.
When the rhythm changes, the culture changes.
“Functioning is not the same as being well. Coping is not the same as capacity.” — Elizabeth Hughes
Relief is not recovery
One of the most important distinctions in this episode is also one of the simplest.
Relief changes your environment.
Recovery changes your physiology.
A holiday, a long weekend, a quieter week — these are relief. They matter. But they are not doing what most leaders believe they are doing. They are not restoring the nervous system. They are not rebuilding the biological capacity that sustained performance requires.
They are pauses in the pattern, not changes to it.
Recovery is something different. It is intentional, physiological, and rhythmic. It doesn’t happen automatically when the pressure lifts. It has to be designed.
And here’s the part most leaders miss: the body doesn’t recover in dramatic bursts. It recovers in small, frequent moments — seconds and minutes, not days.
Elite athletes understand this. They don’t extend performance by pushing harder. They extend it by recovering better. They protect sleep, schedule micro-recovery, and treat rest as part of the architecture of performance — not the reward at the end of it.
“Relief changes your environment. Recovery changes your physiology.” — Elizabeth Hughes
The physiology beneath the pattern
Allostatic load — the wear and tear that accumulates when your system stays in a heightened state for too long — is not sudden. It is slow erosion.
Memory becomes patchy.
Patience shortens.
Creativity narrows.
Sleep becomes shallow.
These are not character failures. They are biological signals. The system trying to get your attention.
When leaders override recovery, the brain shifts into a narrower, more reactive mode. Working memory declines. Decision-making becomes rigid. The prefrontal cortex — the part of the brain leadership depends on most — begins to go offline.
This is not a willpower problem.
This is a rhythm problem.
And when leaders erode, cultures erode with them. This is how depletion becomes inherited — not genetically, but culturally.
“Performance isn’t just extended by effort. It’s extended by rhythm.” — Elizabeth Hughes
Three tools to interrupt the pattern
This episode doesn’t stop at diagnosis. Elizabeth introduces three practical tools designed to work together — to interrupt the pattern, understand what is actually driving it, and begin building something more durable in its place.
The tiny experiment — a 60-second micro-pause. One slow breath. A moment of stillness with your feet on the floor. The only job is to notice what shifts when you stop for one minute.
The reflective question — What is my body telling me right now that my mind is trying to override — and can I meet that truth with kindness rather than judgment?
The ecosystem practice — identify the moment in your day when you are most likely to override your body’s request to pause. Anchor one micro-recovery ritual into that hour. Predictable, repeatable, yours.
Together, these three tools follow a simple arc: interrupt the pattern, understand the pattern, build a new one.
This is how capacity extends.
This is how high-value leadership sustains.
This is how you model a rhythm others can actually inherit.
Designing something better
Endurance was never the strategy it appeared to be.
It was the absence of one.
What replaces it is not less ambition, less commitment, or less drive. It is a different relationship with the biology and nervous system that make leadership possible in the first place — one built on rhythm, recovery, and the understanding that sustainable performance is not a luxury.
It is the foundation.
There is a moment, when the pattern begins to shift, that feels like stepping out of strain and coming back to yourself. Like the mind clearing. The body settling. Decisions arriving from grounded confidence rather than momentum or pressure.
Spacious. Sustainable. Like finally building a long game you can actually live inside.
The thing carrying you was never your endurance.
It was your rhythm.
Listen to the podcast Subscribe to the Leadership Longevity Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or YouTube.
Work with Elizabeth Ready to design leadership that renews rather than depletes?
Book a discovery call at tmegrp.com


