Your Trauma-Wise Career Guide
Summary In this episode, Cyndi Bennett names something most leadership development never teaches: the specific, functional capacities that come from navigating hard things professionally, not despite your history, but because of it. While formal programs are built around frameworks, competencies, and idealized organizations, there is a category of professional knowledge that can only be acquired through lived experience. Cyndi breaks down four specific capacities this kind of experience builds, and makes the case that these are not consolation prizes or things to manage quietly. They are real career assets, and learning to name and use them deliberately is a career strategy, not just a personal growth project. Key Thoughts * Reading a room with accuracy is a precision instrument built through necessity, not a vague soft skill. It comes from having had to track whether an environment was safe. * Understanding how people actually function under pressure only comes from having lived through high-pressure, unclear, or unsafe conditions yourself. Most leadership theory describes optimal conditions that most workplaces never actually have. * Holding complexity without collapsing it, sitting with ambiguity, holding multiple realities at once, is one of the most valuable things a leader can have, because complexity is the default condition of leadership. * A calibrated relationship with risk gives people a more accurate read on what is actually risky versus just unfamiliar, and that steadiness reads as confidence to others. * Many of us learned to attribute our reads on environments to anxiety rather than perception, and to discount our own observations because the environments we were in taught us they were unwelcome. That minimizing is worth noticing. * You are not leading despite your experience. You are leading from it. * Credentials get you in the room. What you know keeps you there and moves you up. What This Means For You If any part of this episode is landing, here are some things worth sitting with: * Notice where you’ve been minimizing what you know. If you’ve learned to call your read on a room “just anxiety” or to second-guess accurate observations because past environments taught you they were wrong, that pattern is worth naming. Your perception was likely working exactly as it should. * Practice naming your capacities out loud, even just to yourself. Reading people accurately, staying steady under pressure, holding ambiguity without forcing a premature resolution. These are skills, not personality quirks, and naming them is the first step to using them deliberately. * Notice the difference between working around your history and working from it. Working around it means managing what you know quietly in the background. Working from it means letting that knowledge actively shape how you lead, make decisions, and navigate hard team dynamics. * Frameworks and lived knowledge are not in competition. Models and structures can still be useful. They simply work differently when they’re in service of what you already know, rather than a replacement for it. * Stop leading with apology for the path that got you here. The people who can take care of a team under real pressure, who notice when someone is struggling before it becomes a performance issue, are often deeply valuable and deeply undercredited. You get to claim that knowledge as real. Come Journey With Us If this resonated with you and you would like to go deeper with the exact tools, resources, and community built specifically to support trauma survivors navigating their careers, consider joining us in the Resilient Career Academy. You don’t have to figure this out alone. There is a place where people understand exactly what you are carrying, and where your pace, your healing, and your story are not just welcomed, they are honored. Get full access to Resilient Career Academy at resilientcareers.substack.com/subscribe [https://resilientcareers.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
62 Episoder
Kommentarer
0Vær den første til å kommentere
Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av Your Trauma-Wise Career Guide sitt community!