EP445: GO FIRST: The Power & Courage It Takes To Lead Without Permission
Wed Feb 04 2026
There is a moment—quiet, internal, undeniable—when you realize you’re being asked to go first. Not first to perform. Not first to prove. First to tell the truth. First to stop pretending something fits when it doesn’t. First to move without permission, applause, or certainty. In this episode, we talk about that moment—why it’s so unsettling, how your wiring influences your resistance, and what it actually costs to ignore the call when you already know what’s true.
What You’ll Learn in This EpisodeWhat “going first” actually means—and what it doesn’tWhy going first feels terrifying even when you know it’s rightHow each Enneagram center resists going first in different waysThe nervous-system reason staying feels safer than leavingThe real cost of not going first—and why it compounds over timeHow to move forward without certainty, approval, or permissionKey Takeaways
Going first is an internal decision, not a public performance:
It’s rarely loud or impressive. Most of the time, it happens quietly—long before anyone else understands or agrees.
Your nervous system prioritizes safety over truth:
Biologically, you’re wired to choose belonging, control, and certainty—even when your soul knows something no longer fits.
Your Enneagram wiring shapes how you resist going first:
Gut types tighten and endure. Heart types adapt and self-abandon. Head types wait for more certainty. Different strategies—same fear.
Waiting is often fear disguised as discernment:
What looks like patience, loyalty, or wisdom is frequently avoidance when staying feels safer than moving. The real question isn’t “Will this work?” but “Can I live with myself if I don’t?”
There comes a moment when staying costs more than leaving—and your body knows it first.
Going first often costs approval but builds self-trust:
You may lose proximity, validation, or familiarity—but you gain clarity, integrity, and forward momentum.
Not going first compounds quietly over time:
Resentment, exhaustion, anxiety, and self-betrayal grow when you keep choosing what fits your past instead of your truth.
Courage isn’t something you wait for—it’s something you practice:
You don’t need permission or certainty. You need the willingness to stop abandoning yourself.
Quotes That Landed
“Leadership doesn’t announce itself. It whispers—and waits to see if you’ll listen.”
“You’re more tired of betraying yourself than being misunderstood.”
“Waiting often isn’t discernment—it’s fear.”
“Going first doesn’t end the story. It begins it.”
“You may lose approval, but you gain self-trust.”
Try This This Week
Notice where you keep circling the same decision.
Ask yourself: What am I hoping will change—when I already know what’s true? Then take one honest step forward without over-explaining, justifying, or waiting for permission.
If this episode stirred something in you, don’t rush to quiet it. That restlessness isn’t a problem—it’s a signal. Share this episode with someone who’s standing at the edge of a decision. Leave a review if it landed. And if you want to keep the conversation going, slide into my DMs and tell me where you feel the call to go first. Next episode, we’re talking about what actually happens after you go first—the good, the hard, and the parts no one likes to talk about.
More
There is a moment—quiet, internal, undeniable—when you realize you’re being asked to go first. Not first to perform. Not first to prove. First to tell the truth. First to stop pretending something fits when it doesn’t. First to move without permission, applause, or certainty. In this episode, we talk about that moment—why it’s so unsettling, how your wiring influences your resistance, and what it actually costs to ignore the call when you already know what’s true. What You’ll Learn in This EpisodeWhat “going first” actually means—and what it doesn’tWhy going first feels terrifying even when you know it’s rightHow each Enneagram center resists going first in different waysThe nervous-system reason staying feels safer than leavingThe real cost of not going first—and why it compounds over timeHow to move forward without certainty, approval, or permissionKey Takeaways Going first is an internal decision, not a public performance: It’s rarely loud or impressive. Most of the time, it happens quietly—long before anyone else understands or agrees. Your nervous system prioritizes safety over truth: Biologically, you’re wired to choose belonging, control, and certainty—even when your soul knows something no longer fits. Your Enneagram wiring shapes how you resist going first: Gut types tighten and endure. Heart types adapt and self-abandon. Head types wait for more certainty. Different strategies—same fear. Waiting is often fear disguised as discernment: What looks like patience, loyalty, or wisdom is frequently avoidance when staying feels safer than moving. The real question isn’t “Will this work?” but “Can I live with myself if I don’t?” There comes a moment when staying costs more than leaving—and your body knows it first. Going first often costs approval but builds self-trust: You may lose proximity, validation, or familiarity—but you gain clarity, integrity, and forward momentum. Not going first compounds quietly over time: Resentment, exhaustion, anxiety, and self-betrayal grow when you keep choosing what fits your past instead of your truth. Courage isn’t something you wait for—it’s something you practice: You don’t need permission or certainty. You need the willingness to stop abandoning yourself. Quotes That Landed “Leadership doesn’t announce itself. It whispers—and waits to see if you’ll listen.” “You’re more tired of betraying yourself than being misunderstood.” “Waiting often isn’t discernment—it’s fear.” “Going first doesn’t end the story. It begins it.” “You may lose approval, but you gain self-trust.” Try This This Week Notice where you keep circling the same decision. Ask yourself: What am I hoping will change—when I already know what’s true? Then take one honest step forward without over-explaining, justifying, or waiting for permission. If this episode stirred something in you, don’t rush to quiet it. That restlessness isn’t a problem—it’s a signal. Share this episode with someone who’s standing at the edge of a decision. Leave a review if it landed. And if you want to keep the conversation going, slide into my DMs and tell me where you feel the call to go first. Next episode, we’re talking about what actually happens after you go first—the good, the hard, and the parts no one likes to talk about.