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How Some Leaders Help to Lighten Tough Moments?

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Gwenola Michaud
Community Champion
Project Manager & Advisor| Geosciences & Monitoring Consulting Milano, Italy

When we talk about making projects smoother or easier, we often focus on tools, processes, or methodologies.

But what really makes the difference is how people show up in tough moments.

I tend to be quite structured and sometimes tense by nature. And over the years, I’ve been struck by how rare—and valuable—it is to work with a team leader who can lighten difficult moments, bring a sense of calm, or simply create “oxygen” when the team needs it most.

Those moments don’t remove the complexity, deadlines, or pressure—but they somehow make them more bearable and even energising.

So I’m curious:

  • How do some leaders manage to do this so naturally?
  • Is it maturity? Emotional intelligence? Inner work?

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Sergio Luis Conte Helping to create solutions for everyone| Worldwide based Organizations Buenos Aires, Argentina
Taking a simplistic way of thinking all is composed by process, tools and people. The third component is what you are talking about if I understood well. Sports help a lot to understand and to manage this type of situations. But in my personal opinion is something that comes with each human being. Is not about projects. Is about the life by itself.
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Eduard Hernandez
Community Champion
Product Operations Program Manager Barcelona, Cataluña, Spain
Remaining calm in stormy weather is a difficult skill to master, yet it is one of the defining traits of a true leader.

There is a Spanish saying, “Vísteme despacio que tengo prisa,” which translates to “Dress me slowly, for I am in a hurry.” The phrase comes from a time when rushing through tasks (especially delicate ones) often led to mistakes that ultimately caused even more delay. In essence, it reminds us that speed achieved through panic or haste is an illusion; real efficiency comes from composed and deliberate actions.
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Gwenola Michaud
Community Champion
Project Manager & Advisor| Geosciences & Monitoring Consulting Milano, Italy
Thanks for all your replies, which I summarize as:
1. Emotional self-management comes first
Leadership under pressure begins internally. The ability to regulate our own emotions and stay grounded prevents stress from cascading through the team.
2. Emotions are contagious
Calm spreads just as quickly as fear. When we remain steady, we create safety and help the team think clearly instead of reacting.
3. Simple Presence and Posture
Simply being there for the team—listening, observing the context, and offering quiet authority—often matters more than giving rapid instructions.
4. Confidence in the team multiplies capability
When we show genuine belief in the team’s ability to solve problems, it changes the atmosphere. That confidence strengthens collective capability and innovation toward solutions.
5. Slow down to move better and faster
The idea behind “Dress/Drive slowly, as I am in a hurry” reminds us that rushing creates mistakes. True efficiency comes from deliberate, composed action—even in urgent situations.

Thank you!
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