(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
  • Pick Now Podcast

February 23, 2026 by Jeff

“Servant Leadership” Is a Lie

At least the watered-down version most of us use.

I know several founders who absolutely see themselves as servant leaders.

What I see is different. I see leaders who routinely avoid conflicts, put others’ needs ahead of their own, and give away all their power.

They call themselves servant leaders to avoid looking at the truth.

Servant Leadership was an incredibly powerful idea in its original form. It was about empowerment of others, yes, but more importantly it was NOT about the leader giving up their own power. It was about the leader exercising that power differently.

Here’s what got lost along the way—

Service Turned Into Appeasement

Serving the growth of people turned into keeping people comfortable. Leaders learned to smooth edges, avoid friction, and soften feedback in the name of empathy. But growth requires tension. When leaders eliminate discomfort, they don’t create safety—they create stagnation.

Power Became Morally Suspect

Instead of being stewarded, authority quietly turned into something to apologize for. Leaders hesitated to decide. Consensus replaced ownership. Responsibility dissolved into process. Power doesn’t vanish when leaders refuse to use it—it just moves underground into politics and resentment.

Empathy Replaced Accountability

Listening became an end in itself rather than a prelude to action. Leaders got very good at understanding feelings and very bad at making decisions and setting standards. Empathy without accountability is just avoidance with better language.

Development Got Replaced By Niceness

The original question—are people becoming more capable and autonomous?—was replaced by are people happy and likely to stay? Being liked became the metric. But developing adults requires saying no, setting boundaries, and insisting on responsibility. Niceness is cheap. Development is not. But only development pays off. And most leaders, at least the kind you want to keep—want to develop and grow.

Emotional Labor Replaced Strategy

Many servant leaders became emotional shock absorbers, taking on everyone else’s anxiety. Over time, teams learned to escalate instead of own. Leaders burned out. Organizations infantilized themselves. What looked like care was actually dependency training. And meaningful progress stagnated.

Actual Servant Leadership Builds Clarity and Boundaries

Remember you are a servant to the company, not subservient to its people.

There are employees who want to learn and grow and challenge themselves. There are employees who just want to be told what to do and to do a good job doing it.

This most recent iteration of servant leadership serves neither.

Ask the following questions—

  • Is your team clear who is making each decision (and how)? Especially when it’s not you?
  • Are your people learning to make more and more significant decisions, and to be held accountable for them?
  • How quickly do you share feedback, both positive and negative?
  • Do people feel willing to share positivity and negative feedback with each other, without involving you?
  • If your best person left, are you confident another employee could step into that role? What about your best five people?
  • Are people who do not want to rise in the organization clear on how to do their jobs well?

Mastering true servant leadership creates the very best (and most valuable) kind of company. The kind that grows itself, and its people, without you.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

February 16, 2026 by Jeff

Lifemaxxing is the Newest Way to Avoid Living

“Maxxing” is all over LinkedIn these days. 75 Hard. Cold plunges. Supplements. Sleep scores. Net worth trackers. The fantasy is simple: optimize everything and then life will feel meaningful.

It won’t.

Lifemaxxing is just productivity culture wearing spiritual clothes.

It promises control. It delivers anxiety.

Because meaning doesn’t come from winning at life.

It comes from choosing a life.

Lifemaxxing can’t answer the most fundamental question:

Why?

A meaningful life isn’t optimized. It’s committed.

  • Committed to people who can disappoint you.
  • Committed to work that might not work.
  • Committed to saying what you actually think, not what performs well.
  • Committed to paths you can’t spreadsheet your way through.

Optimization asks:

“How do I get the most upside with the least risk?”

Meaning asks:

“What am I willing to stand for even if it costs me?”

That’s why meaning feels scary. There’s no dashboard. No scorecard. No guarantee.

And that’s the point.

If you want a meaningful life, stop trying to max everything.

Pick something. Care deeply. Risk being wrong.

Let the friction teach you.

You don’t need a better system.

You need a clearer yes.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

February 9, 2026 by Jeff

My Full Time Job Wasn’t Just the Business

It was managing everyone else around the business.

“How’s it going?”

“What do you think this month will look like?”

“That must be really scary. I could never do that.”

Family. Clients. Trusted friends.

All framed as concern. But really? They wanted me to manage their nervous systems. And it was exhausting.

I only realized recently that I don’t have to do that.

I grew up thinking it was my job to keep everyone calm. To be the steady one. The reasonable one. The one who had it handled.

I got very good at it. So good that people commented on how calm I was.

I wasn’t. (Performative calm is absolutely a thing.)

During the day, I was mostly fine. At night, I woke up in a sweat. About the business. And about what I would say about the business.

How honest I could be.

Who I could actually help. Who I couldn’t. How many clients I needed. How close the math really was. What would happen if the math didn’t work out.

Same thoughts. Over and over and over.

Some of this is our human psychology. At night, fear runs the prison with no guards.

But a lot of it?

Optional.

When we are both present, I know I can help you. You know it too.

What you’re feeling isn’t confusion.

It’s just fear.

And the places you’re afraid to look?

That’s exactly where the work starts.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

February 2, 2026 by Jeff

When “Good Enough” Stops Working

Neo isn’t hiding who he is.

He’s already looking.

By day, Thomas Anderson does what’s required.

Keeps the job. Stays inside the lines. Functions.

By night, he searches.

Follows a signal he can’t name. A person he barely knows. A quiet hope that there’s a truth that can save him.

The Matrix Isn’t What You Think

The Matrix doesn’t trap you with comfort.

It traps you with good enough.

Bills paid. Respect earned. People depending on you.

Just enough to postpone the real questions. Just enough to avoid the real risk.

Don Draper builds a mask to survive the past.

Neo is willing to leave because his future won’t leave him alone.

The exhaustion doesn’t come from effort. It comes from running two operating systems at once.

One self that keeps everything working. Another that knows working isn’t the same as living.

Morpheus Doesn’t Have Answers

He offers only the truth: that “Thomas Anderson” is a simulation of a life.

Morpheus doesn’t wake Neo up. He finds him already awake, and tired of pretending.

Neo is willing to leave numb safety for dangerous truth.

Not because he’s certain. But because his responsible self and his searching self can’t stay separate anymore.

Because good enough never actually was.

Nothing Is Wrong With You

If this is landing, nothing is wrong with you.

You’re not failing. You’re already halfway out.

Most people don’t talk about this until it starts costing them sleep. I didn’t.

The only question is which direction you head next.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • …
  • 81
  • 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