"Your character is your limitation (wait, what?)"
Discover why behavioral flexibility matters more than strong character. Learn how strong character limits your growth and how to increase your range to stop anxious attachment, people pleasing or self-doubt.
My close friend Ksenia gave me an amazing compliment. She said I'm "like an open book written in an unknown language."
I laughed, of course. I knew exactly what she meant.
Even when she thinks she knows me well, I surprise her in ways she doesn't expect. I'm unpredictable. And that I am.
For example: I hate violence, avoid movies that show it, and yet one of my favorite games is Mortal Kombat. (I have no problem kicking ass as Noob Saibot, thank you very much.)
I'm deeply social and love being around people, yet the idea of going to a pub with coworkers on a Friday just to sit for hours? Draining.
The list of my seemingly opposite preferences is long for me.
This contradiction brings me to something I heard years ago that shifted how I see personal growth:
Your character is your limitation.
I know, I know. We all grew up hearing that having a strong character is a virtue. That not having one makes you a š. I wanted an explanation too!
So where does this idea come from?
This principle is borrowed from cybernetics and systems theory, which states: The element with the greatest flexibility controls the system.
In simpler terms? Whoever has more behavioral flexibility has more influence and more success.
But what does this have to do with character?
I like to think of character the way Lao Tzu did:
"Watch your thoughts, they become your words; watch your words, they become your actions; watch your actions, they become your habits; watch your habits, they become your character; watch your character, it becomes your destiny."
This beautifully describes how thinking the same thoughts makes you act the same way (habit), and how that creates certain inflexibility (character) that, in turn, creates your results in life.
In practice you say things like:
"I can't just leave, I'm not that kind of person." (Anxious Attachment)
"I can't speak up, I'm too shy." (Self-Doubt)
"I canāt just say No. Thatās rude" (People Pleasing)
Every "excuse" is a signal of lost flexibility. A fixation on a set character.
Think about it:
In relationships, the partner who can regulate their nervous system, shift perspective, soften their stance, and adjust their communication style will influence the dynamic more than the partner who clings to being right.
In leadership, the manager who can move fluidly between firmness and empathy, structure and openness, will outperform the one who hides behind a strictly defined character.
In life, the person who can adapt their response by having control of it, rather than defaulting to the same pattern every time, has more freedom and hence options.
A strong character may look impressive from the outside.
But true strength is the ability to choose your response.
True power is having a wide range of behaviors available to you and the ability to select the right one for the moment.
The role of therapy or coaching, then, is not to change who you are.
It's to increase your range.
To widen your behavioral options.
To enrich you.
To help you outgrow old strategies that no longer serve the life you want to build.
And Iāll leave you with these two questions:
What are the things you feel most inflexible about?
What results does that inflexibility bring into your life?
With Love & Solidarity,
Jelena
www.coachingwithjelena.com
āFoundations of anxiety, self-doubt, and modern human sufferingā
Anxiety, overthinking, self-doubt, and impostor syndrome are not signs that something is wrong with you. They are signs that your brain is doing exactly what it evolved to do - just in a world it was not originally designed for.
Letās talk about negativity bias, where it comes from, and why real change requires more than understanding.
If you are a human on this planet, chances are that you know very well what anxiety, self-doubt, and overthinking feel like. And If youāve ever thought, āLogically, I know everything is fine⦠so why do I feel this way?ā - this article is for you.
Anxiety, overthinking, self-doubt, and impostor syndrome are not signs that something is wrong with you. They are signs that your brain is doing exactly what it evolved to do - just in a world it was not originally designed for.
Letās talk about negativity bias, where it comes from, and why real change requires more than understanding.
Why anxiety feels real when nothing is wrong?
To answer this highly popular question, let me introduce the brainās Negativity Bias. Negativity Bias is our brainās tendency to:
Notice negative information faster
Remember it longer
Give it more emotional weight than neutral or positive information.
Sounds kinda daunting, right? But let me explain whatās behind it according to evolutionary neuroscience.
For ~200,000 years, the human brain evolved in environments where:
Missing a real threat = death
Being exiled from the tribe = death
Being in a new environment = high chances of death
So the brain learned a simple rule:
āItās better to assume danger and be wrong than to assume safety and be dead.ā
This is why:
One criticism outweighs ten compliments
One awkward interaction replays all night
One uncertainty triggers anxiety, even when life is objectively okay
In simple terms, we can look at it in the following way:
Your brain is not asking: āIs this likely?ā. Itās asking: āCould this hurt me?ā
The brain structure involved in this process, called the amygdala, scans and reacts to rejection, uncertainty, social tension, loss of control, conflict, and challenging conversations as if they were a threat to your physical well-being. Because a looong time ago, that meant being exiled from your tribe and potentially being eaten.
Remember, the brain's only job is to keep you alive, happy or not, is irrelevant for the brain.
This is why anxiety appears without logic.
Then we also have the hippocampus responsible for memory + pattern storage and it stores emotionally charged memories. Negative experiences get encoded faster and deeper. This explains why one painful breakup can shape relationship beliefs for decades.
And of course, letās not forget about the Prefrontal cortex (PFC) responsible for reasoning & regulation. The caveat with this guy, though, is that it switches on in a calm state, but under stress, the PFC goes partially offline.
This is why telling yourself to ācalm downā when you have anxiety doesnāt work.
You may think, āModern threats are rarely physical.ā True. But your nervous system is still hardwired to see the above as real danger.
Conflict with someone turns into āThey do not like me anymore, which means, I will be isolated, being isolated means danger, and that I will be eaten by a lionā.
As silly as this sounds, this is very close to what the biased brain that evolved through thousands of years of literally surviving actually thinks.
So it releases: adrenaline & cortisol, and as a result, you feel anxiety, rumination, overthinking or hypervigilance.
Where Therapy Often Ends and Coaching Begins
Therapy is invaluable. Especially for trauma processing, safety, and healing the past.
But many people reach a point where they say:
āI understand why Iām like this.ā
āIāve processed my childhood.ā
āI know this isnāt rational.ā
And yetā¦
Their body still reacts.
This is because insight doesnāt automatically rewire the nervous system.
Knowing why youāre anxious doesnāt teach your system what safety feels like now.
Coaching works in the present-moment loop where patterns actually run.
It helps you:
Notice beliefs as they activate in real time
Interrupt the stress response before it hijacks your day
Rebuild trust between your mind and body
Practice regulation while living your real life
This is how rewiring happens. And thatās exactly where coaching lives.
With Love & Solidarity,
Jelena
When Your Career Thrives, but You Donāt
For Women Whoāre Winning at Work and Struggling Inside
Recently, I attended a Womenās Circle event organised by Women In Tech. It was brilliant! We talked business, love, health yet one theme kept coming up:
High-functioning anxiety in high-functioning women.
Itās when you lead, deliver, manage, support everyoneā¦
while internally battling chronic stress, overthinking, emotional exhaustion, imposter syndrome and a constant need to prove yourself.
You look āfine,ā but you don't feel fine.
And I know this world far too well.
I trained & coached wonderful teams, worked with excellent managers, met big CEOs, was hired by Irish musicians, designers, published in newspapers & magazines, while in my personal life, I was insecure and crippling.
My emotions ran the show.
My body was breaking down long before I admitted anything was wrong.
When your inner world is ruled by fear, your brain minimises you and your achievements. So despite success on the outside, you remain feeling small.
Thatās what high-functioning anxiety does to you, it keeps you performing and shrinking at the same time. I learned to cry in the morning, perform all day, fall apart at night and repeat.
And somehow, despite insomnia, anxiety, and emotional burnout⦠I still kept delivering and even being promoted. Because honestly? I loved what I do.
But inside, all the unaddressed and unchanged patterns were dissociating me from my own life.
Talking therapies helped me understand my pain. But they didnāt shift me into safety in the present.
That came later, through deeper identity work, nervous system science, and the kind of support I now offer.
So today, I want to give you a simple but powerful exercise to reconnect with yourself and get real:
1. Write down 5 achievements youāre genuinely proud of.
2. For each, remember how you actually felt at the time.
Rate it from 1ā10 (1 = numb, 10 = deeply fulfilled).
3. If any score is below 10 or 9, ask:
āWhat made it hard to fully receive this?ā
Write down the first sentence that comes up, without censoring it.
This reveals your internal limits: the beliefs that block joy, self-worth beliefs, dissociating anxiety etc.
4. Now write 5 things you want to achieve next, in work and in life.
5. Circle the ONE that would make the biggest difference right now.
And finally:
6. Ask - what identity would I need to embody to make this possible?
7. What are you responsible for here?
Because real success is never just strategy.
Itās identity.
Itās safety.
Itās a regulated nervous system.
Itās an inner world that CAN HANDLE the life youāre building.
If this resonates with you, sign up for my blog and newsletter below. Iād love to have youš
With love & solidarity,
Jelena