Episode 60: Beyond BELIEVE: Ted Lasso is Coming Back and the Mental Health Leadership Lessons Remain as Important as Ever
My man Ted Lasso ⚽ is coming back in August! I recently saw the trailer 📽️ for Season 4 and I have been thinking about why that show resonated so deeply with so many people.
Yes, it was funny.🤣 Yes, it was warm.💖 Yes, it gave us biscuits🍪, locker room speeches, and “Believe.” But underneath all of that, it also reminded us of something we do not say often enough: everyone struggles.😥 Not some people. Not only people going through extraordinary circumstances. All of us.
Struggling is one of the most ordinary things in the world. And yet, in the workplace, mental health still often feels like something employees are expected to manage quietly, privately, and without disrupting the appearance of being “fine.”
As we've discussed here in the past, employees may hesitate to disclose mental health concerns for many reasons. There is still stigma. There exists the sense that nobody else is talking about it, so maybe they should not either. There is apprehension that disclosure will affect how they are viewed, staffed, promoted, or trusted. There is fear of the “back in my day” response that minimizes what they are experiencing. And sometimes, employees simply do not know where to go, who to ask, or what resources are available.
That hesitation should matter to leaders. No, this hesitation MUST matter to leaders.
Because a culture that says “we care about mental health” is not the same as a culture where employees actually feel safe raising mental health concerns.🗣️ As leaders, we have a responsibility to close that gap. That means talking about mental health in ordinary, non-crisis moments. It means making resources visible and easy to access. It means training managers not to minimize, overreact, or inadvertently punish vulnerability. It means being clear that asking for support is not a lack of commitment, resilience, or professionalism. And it means recognizing that employees are watching what happens when someone does speak up.
Ted Lasso works because it shows that care, accountability, performance, and vulnerability can exist in the same room.💕
Our workplaces need more of that. Not performative empathy. Not posters in the break room. Not a once-a-year reminder during Mental Health Awareness Month. Real leadership means helping people feel safe enough to say, “I’m struggling,” and confident enough to believe that saying so will not cost them their future.
BELIEVE is a great slogan.
But belonging, safety, and support are built by what leaders do next.
#leadership #mentalhealth #mentalhealthawarenessmonth #mentalhealthawareness #empathy #tedlasso