Four Seconds That Changed a Leader


More than a decade after my coaching certification, certain ideas still return to me with surprising clarity. One of them is deceptively simple:

The difference between reacting and responding.

Most leaders intellectually understand this distinction. Few recognise how profoundly it shapes their daily impact.

I was reminded of this during a coaching conversation with a senior executive β€” let me call him Raghav. Raghav was known for his brilliance and intensity. Quick thinker. Decisive. Deeply committed. But his team described him using another word, offered cautiously and repeatedly: β€œIntimidating.”

When he came into coaching, his concern was framed differently. β€œMy team has become strangely silent,” he told me. β€œMeetings lack energy. No one challenges anything. It’s frustrating.”

Frustration, I have learned, is often an interesting doorway.

β€œWhat usually happens when someone disagrees with you?” I asked. He looked puzzled. β€œNothing unusual. We discuss.”

But leaders rarely observe their own behavioural patterns with accuracy. Our reactions are invisible to us precisely because they are so familiar. So, I asked him to walk me through a recent meeting.

He described a discussion where a junior manager questioned a proposal. As he narrated the incident, something subtle appeared β€” not in his words, but in his tone. β€œI explained why the idea wouldn’t work,” he said.

Then after a pause: β€œPerhaps a bit sharply.” β€œWhat do you think the manager experienced in that moment?” I asked. He shrugged. β€œDirect feedback.” β€œAnd if we asked them?” Silence.

The human mind is wonderfully efficient at justifying its own reactions.

**

In coaching, reactions are rarely the real story. Triggers are.

β€œWhat specifically triggered your response?” I asked. β€œThe suggestion didn’t make sense.” β€œWas it the quality of the idea,” I continued, β€œor the fact that it challenged yours?”

That question lingered longer. Eventually he smiled β€” the kind that signals reluctant insight. β€œI don’t like being questioned in areas I know well.”

There it was. A deeply human pattern. Trigger β†’ irritation β†’ sharp dismissal.

Repeated often enough, reactions harden into leadership style. Unexamined long enough, they reshape culture.

We explored a small experiment. β€œNext time you feel that familiar irritation,” I said, β€œdon’t change your opinion. Don’t soften your standards. Simply pause.”

β€œPause?”

β€œFour seconds,” I suggested. β€œOne breath. No words.” He laughed. β€œThat sounds trivial.” β€œIt is trivial,” I agreed. β€œAnd extremely difficult.”

Because reactions are automated. Responses are chosen.

**

Several weeks later, Raghav returned with an observation that genuinely surprised him. β€œThe meetings feel different,” he said.

β€œWhat changed?”

β€œI haven’t changed my decisions,” he clarified. β€œBut I’ve started noticing the moment before I speak.”

β€œAnd?”

β€œThe irritation is still there,” he admitted. β€œBut the pause stops me from firing.” That single gap β€” barely a few seconds β€” had altered the emotional climate of his interactions.

People spoke more. Defensiveness reduced. Energy returned. Nothing structural had changed. Only awareness.

**

Reacting is effortless because it is borrowed from the past β€” old patterns, old triggers, old conditioning.

Responding requires presence. Choice. Consciousness.

Who would imagine that leadership transformation might sometimes begin not with strategy, but with something far smaller? One breath. Four seconds.

Just enough space for wisdom to enter where habit once ruled.

In Musing……                                                                                           Shakti Ghosal

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Author: Shakti Ghosal

* A PCC Credentialed Executive Coach mentor and trainer for leaders & performance. * A qualified engineer and a PGDM (Faculty Gold medalist) from IIM Bangalore. * Four decades of industry experience spanning Engineering, Maintenance, Projects, Consumer durables, Supply Chains, Aviation and Tourism. * Top level management positions to drive business development, strategy, alliances all around the globe. * A visiting faculty at the IIMs. *A passion to envision trends & disseminate Leadership incubation globally. www.empathinko.in , * www.linkedin.com/in/Shaktighosal. shakti.ghosal@gmail.com . +91 - 9051787576

4 thoughts on “Four Seconds That Changed a Leader”

  1. Today I am a better responder. I used to be a reactor for years. I think a lot of it stemmed from a huge lack of self confidence. Once I accepted who and what I was, I became able to open my perceptions of other others wider.

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