(970) 922-9272 | jeff@jmunn.com

Jeff Munn, Creating Extraordinary Futures

My WordPress Blog

  • Jeff Munn, Creating Extraordinary Futures
  • Home
  • About
    • About You
    • More About Me
    • Testimonials
  • Services
    • Coaching
    • Retreats
    • The Story Behind the Name
  • Resources
    • The “Pick Now” Approach
    • From Picking Now to Creating an Extraordinary Future
    • My YouTube Channel
    • Two Centering Practices to Deal with Stress
  • Blog
  • Contact
    • Schedule a Conversation

November 25, 2025 by Jeff

The Leader’s Journey is a Spiritual One (Yours, Too)

I’ve now recorded twelve episodes of my new podcast, Pick Now.

I focus on the hard choices that founders make, over and over again, as they bring their visions into the world.

The things they struggled with, and the things they continue to struggle with, no matter their past level of success and what they are tackling next.

I’ve asked every one of my guests a version of this question—

“Do you think the entrepreneurial journey is a spiritual one?”

And every one of them has said yes.

The Questions You’re Trying to Answer

Every leader I work with has had significant success by the time they find me. But they might be exhausted. They might see that money isn’t giving them the happiness they thought it would. They might be finding they are always at work, even when they are with their spouse and kids. They might be worried about a health issue. And they wonder what all the hard work is all for.

Their questions are the same ones I continue to ask myself—

How do I stop being so hard on myself?

Why aren’t I happier?

What is my deeper purpose?

These are spiritual questions. And I find the more material success someone has, the more these questions lurk in the background.

Every leader has some version of this spiritual path, whether they call it spiritual or not.

This is mine.

Leadership is Learning to be Yourself

The first three decades of my life were largely performative. I got straight A’s in school, highest honors in college, degree from a top law school, partner track at a firm that was among the tops in the nation in my practice area.

And then in 1995, three months after my 30th birthday, I left.

At that point I would not have called my life spiritual in the least. But I was starting to see that the outer version of success didn’t feel all that fulfilling.

I was beginning to get curious. I had gone through phases, done some reading. Read the New Testament cover to cover during one semester in college, got curious about eastern philosophy during law school.

But my daytime, in the classroom and later in the office, was all about performance. About finding the next mountain to climb and then wondering why it only seemed to make my panic attacks worse.

What I Hid (Even From Myself)

I knew something was off. At the time, though, mental health was not talked about. I remember people in my family who beat their wives, who drank a six pack of beer every night and more. But it was the one who went to a “shrink” who was ridiculed.

So I told my wife when I started to meditate in 1996. But no one else.

I had buried so much. I had not let myself acknowledge all the things that I struggled with, in an attempt to “man up.” I suppose it was because any needs that I had in childhood brought up so much anxiety in my mom that it just wasn’t worth it. So I did my best, through positive thinking and self-medication, not to feel anything.

Or say anything about what I was feeling. (Not that I actually knew.)

I discovered, gradually and then suddenly, how unhappy I was in my carefully constructed life.

I left my marriage, I started going on meditation retreats, and working with spiritual teachers.

The Work at Work

And I started getting promoted at work.

I became a partner in the consulting firm I joined when I left the law firm. I managed a group of lawyers who were all at least ten years older than me. I managed large client relationships and moved from Chicago to Washington, DC. I led a team of national subject matter experts including some of the smartest lawyers, actuaries and pharmacists I had ever met.

I was showing up more. I was happier, more engaged, more calm. But I was still living two lives.

I wasn’t telling my work friends about my meditation retreats, and I wasn’t talking much about my corporate life when I was working with spiritual teachers.

Each half of me was embarrassed of the other, “weird” part. Until one day I outed myself to a spiritually curious friend. It got easier from there. But fully owning all the parts of me continues to be both difficult and incredibly fulfilling.

Finding Questions, Not Answers

We all have that work friend who has found (insert answer here) and is happy to tell you all about it.

I had a short period like that, too, where I thought I had an “answer.”

But as I studied more, as I practiced more, and as I coach more and more leaders, I have found that everyone has to find their own path. One of my early coaching mentors, Doug Silsbee, never stopped looking for ways to help people on their journeys, up until his untimely death in 2018. His “beginner’s mind” continues to inspire me.

What’s Your Path?

Most of my clients have specific “outer” goals. Revenue, profit, enterprise value. But they have seen what the traditional way takes out of them and are determined to do it differently.

Every leader I have worked with had a different version of that journey. A different version of those questions. A different way of challenging both their physiology and their psychology as they learn what works for them and what simply isn’t true.

What does that bring up for you?

For more, follow the Pick Now Podcast, subscribe to my email list, and of course follow me on LinkedIn.

And when you feel called, reach out directly.

#PickNow

Filed Under: Uncategorized

November 24, 2025 by Jeff

The Fear That Builds Great Companies

I’ve never met a successful founder who wasn’t willing to make big decisions—while scared.

These founders aren’t impulsive. Or reckless. But they are willing to move on what they know to be true, even when they didn’t have all the data.

That’s what separates the ones who grow from the ones who stall.

You Already Know What to Do

I know that fear personally.

When I was laid off in 2016, I had every reason to play it safe—to get another corporate job, polish the résumé, wait for certainty. Instead, I took a leap into coaching (though I confess it took me a few months) with no guarantee it would work.

Looking back, that one decision changed everything. Not because I had it figured out, but because I finally stopped waiting to feel ready.

I knew that committing to coaching was the only way to get ready.

And as I began to work with founders, I saw that the more successful they were, the more willing they were to take action in uncertainty. To trust what they felt they knew. To react to what they learned from taking action. And to keep doing it until they got what they wanted.

That’s the essence of Pick Now—and it’s what my new podcast is about.

Learn From Others Who Pick Now

On The Pick Now Podcast, I’ll talk with founders who’ve made hard choices when the stakes were high and the outcome was unknown. Founders who sold their companies, walked away from safety, or built something new when everyone else told them not to.

They’ll share what it took to move forward in the middle of fear, and how those acts of courage reshaped their leadership, and their lives. Even when they didn’t work out.

Because fear isn’t a red flag. It’s a green light. It’s the last thing you feel before you take the leap.

Dropping Friday November 14

The Pick Now Podcast drops this Friday, November 14 wherever you get your podcasts.

The first two episodes are short solo episodes about my Pick Now tool and how the need to prove yourself gets in the way of creating anything of value. My in-depth interviews with founders start Friday, November 21.

Please make sure you subscribe and let everyone know about this ongoing conversation about courageous leadership.

If you’ve been circling a decision, waiting for “the right time,” this is the podcast for you.

Pick Now

Remember, clarity and relief don’t come before action. They come from action. Take action and see what shows up. Keep doing that and in a month you won’t recognize yourself. Do that for a year and your team, your board, your company will never be the same again.

#PickNow

Filed Under: Uncategorized

November 21, 2025 by Jeff

Everything is Easy When You See This

I’m a big fan of the book 10x is Easier Than 2x by Dan Sullivan and Ben Hardy.

My favorite statement in the book is on page 69—

“[This founder] exhibits a quality that only the world’s top achievers do: the ability to rapidly accept a new identity.” — 10x Is Easier Than 2x: How World-Class Entrepreneurs Achieve More by Doing Less

There are two interesting things about this statement—

First, there is nothing in the rest of the book that explains how to do this.

Second, there is nothing in the rest of the book to suggest that entrepreneurs (or “top achievers” in the lingo of the book) are unique in this capacity.

Everything Comes From Your Identity

You’ve spent most of your life trying to figure out who you are—

Are you your achievements? Your job title or company name? Your relationships? Your history? Your sense of self-esteem?

All of these are concepts. Thoughts. They come and go with your moods, your physical state, and yes, the words you use to describe them. Even your stuff, the solid things that you have bought with money, are based on the concept of ownership. Another thought.

Every one of these things that we call “identity” happened in the past.

We talk of the “past” as solid and fixed but over the course of our lives we define and redefine its meaning over and over again.

Most of the time, most of us use the stories we tell about the past as a way to limit us. To keep us small and safe. And we change them only when absolutely necessary.

What if there’s another way?

How Have You Created Your Identity?

Most of us create our identity one hundred percent unconsciously, mostly in childhood, mostly by believing what authority figures have told us.

Once formed, we never touch it again.

You can see this, in yourself and others, every time someone uses a form of the word “is,” with or without the word “not” in front of it.

I am honest and hardworking. I’m not creative. That’s not who I am.

The rich are greedy and selfish. Life is hard. Nature is cruel.

Do you see that you’re not describing your reality with those words, but creating it?

How Tightly Do You Hold Onto Your World?

Even the most powerful leaders I coach, people who have grown companies worth hundreds of millions of dollars, will fight, sometimes for years, for their limitations.

One founder I work with continues to insist that only something outside of him (a sale of his company) will create “freedom” in his life. He hangs onto the pressure and stress he constantly puts on himself, terrified that if he stops, he will “lose his edge.”

He builds his prison quite willingly, moment by moment, insisting that it is useful, terrified to let it go in anything other than very small ways.

What Truth Are You Refusing to See?

Every step of the entrepreneurial journey requires a newer, bigger identity. Not one that takes on more, but one that lets go of more and more.

Until the very company whose success you poured your identity into now succeeds without any involvement from you whatsoever.

For most people, that level of success feels more like death. (I often hear of a valley of despair after successful founders sell.)

Are you willing to let go of your need to achieve and to get credit for that achievement?

Are you willing to?

A Faster Way to Learn New Skills

Most people learn new skills from their existing identity.

For example, an identity might learn the skills of “executive presence,” like a firm handshake or dominant body language or steady eye contact. Or communication skills, like reflective listening or nodding to show you have understood.

But anyone who had tried to learn skills this way knows how exhausting it is—

You have to not only maintain the identity that you have had your whole life, but you then have to learn the new skills through that identity. I have learned to be nervous and introverted and now have to paper over that with a firm handshake and eye contact.

The two are completely contradictory. Is it any wonder it doesn’t go well?

But when we stop trying to “be” something, we are actually presence itself. Those other skills emerge authentically and automatically.

They don’t have to be learned. They are innate.

Many of the other more holistic skills of leadership (connection, strategic thinking, emotional resonance) are also innate, if you can simply get your manufactured identity out of the way of them.

Who Will Challenge Your Limitations?

Most people are unwilling to see how their identity limits them, let alone challenge that identity. But identity can be changed and even dropped.

The first step is to see that identity can be developed, molded, changed. The next is to see that you can change in and out of identities as needed. Notice how you are different when you are at work, when you are with your partner, when you are with your kids or your childhood friends.

Notice who you are when you are at your childhood home over the holidays.

The final version of this is to see, to fundamentally realize, that your identity is 100 percent made up 100 percent of the time.

That you don’t even have to make up an identity to suit the occasion. You can just act.

And when someone else can see you and hold you to this, all the better.

The Easiest Way to Make a Dent in Your Identity is to Pick Now

Make one choice that is inconsistent with your current version of yourself. Something that you know you need to do that you have been putting off.

Take one small action, today.

What do you learn when you do this? What happens when you do it again?

Pick Now, over and over again, and your identity will change dramatically. You will see how unlimited you, your team, and your company actually are.

You will see your future possibilities differently because they will actually be different.

Want support on that? Reach out—I’m putting together something to help you change quickly and easily.

#PickNow

Filed Under: Uncategorized

November 20, 2025 by Jeff

You Get What You Are Committed To

I woke up at 3 a.m. Sunday morning in Bettendorf, Iowa. I was sweating. My heart was racing. It was like the panic attacks I used to have in the nineties.

What was going on?

I was visiting my mom, and second-guessing myself. It was a space that I used to be in all the time. My mom virtually lives there. For decades, I did, too. I didn’t know there was an option to be any other way.

I’d just bought a professional-level tenor saxophone in Denver—a serious upgrade from the beginner horns I’d been playing for two and a half years—and suddenly, in the middle of the night, I was asking myself, what have I done?

Who am I to own a pro horn?

What will people think of me, buying that nice a horn?

Do I deserve it? Can I ever make full use of it?

What Was Really Going On

That’s when I saw what was really going on.

This wasn’t about the saxophone. It was about my commitment.

What was I actually committed to? To impressing people? To pretending I’m a better musician than I really am? To earning status through buying nice things? To showing off?

It wasn’t any of those things.

Commitment Is Not About Worthiness

I wasn’t saying I was ready for a pro instrument. I was saying I was ready to be committed to mastery.

I wasn’t buying the horn because I thought I was a professional player. I was buying the horn because I wanted nothing in the way of my becoming as good as I could be.

This isn’t a two-and-a-half-year thing. It’s not even a ten-year thing. It’s the rest of my life.

I didn’t want my equipment—or my own self-doubt—to get in the way of the level of growth I’m chasing. The horn was just a symbol of that commitment.

Could I continue to learn on my beginner horn? Absolutely. But it was getting in my way, yes, from a technical perspective, but more importantly, from a mindset perspective.

Every time I blow that horn it reinforces the idea that I am a beginner, and I want more. I am more. Even now.

And the more I thought about it, the more I realized how many other places I’ve held myself back by staying “half-in.”

The Hidden Cost of Hedge-Your-Bets Thinking

At the start of my coaching career, I did the same thing many founders do. I tested everything: job hunting, consulting, coaching—waiting to see which lane “popped.”

None of them did.

Momentum didn’t come until I declared, I’m all-in on coaching.

Most entrepreneurs think they’re managing risk by keeping options open. In reality, they’re diluting focus. They want to be successful—as long as there’s no risk in being successful.

They half commit to success to protect themselves from failure.

Does that feel familiar?

That kind of half-commitment keeps you safe, and stuck, at the same time.

Identity Follows Declaration

The real shift happens when you stop saying I’m trying this and start saying this is who I am.

When I said, I am a coach, everything changed.

When I said, I am a musician, everything changed again.

You can’t wait for proof before committing. Commitment creates the proof.

Act From the Future You Already See

If there’s a version of you who has already succeeded, how does that person act today? What habits, tools, and environments support them?

I practice every day, like the master I am becoming.

I make bold proposals that my future coaching self is proud of.

That’s the standard. Not your current comfort zone.

For musician me, that meant buying the saxophone—and backing it with the hours, the instruction, the study.

For founder you, it might mean the team you recruit, the product you launch, the board members and experts and coach you hire to advise you.

Pick Now

You can’t hedge your way into mastery.

Whatever you’re hesitating on—the investment, the call, the decision—you already know the answer.

Fear isn’t a red flag. It’s a green light.

Make the commitment first. The clarity, relief, and momentum follow.

Because you only get what you’re 100% committed to.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • …
  • 78
  • Next Page »

Join My Community

You’ll get weekly emails and videos that you can’t get anywhere else. And you’ll be the first to hear about what I’m working on, including new ways that we might work together.


 


 



Jeff Munn



(970) 922-9272
jeff@jmunn.com


Carbondale, CO

Contact

Contact Information

Phone: (970) 922-9272
Email: jeff@jmunn.com
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

A Website by Brighter Vision | Privacy Policy