Authoring Your Leadership: Rewriting the Script
A Leadership Reflection Tool · Part II

Authoring Your LeadershipRewriting the Script

Every leader carries invisible scripts — beliefs formed over time through experience, environment, and the voices of others. These scripts run quietly in the background, shaping how you see yourself as a leader, what you believe is possible, and whether you step forward or hold back. Not all of them work against you. Some have served you well and still do. This tool invites you to bring those scripts into the light, examine what each one has been doing for you, and make a conscious choice — to retain the beliefs that truly serve you, or to rewrite the ones that don't. This is what authoring your own leadership looks like from the inside.

Part One
Recognize the Script

Read each belief slowly. Notice which ones feel familiar — even if you're not completely sure they're true for you. Select all that resonate.

Your Selected Scripts
"Things won't change here."
"If only I had a better boss or leadership team."
"I don't see myself as a leader."
"I need more experience before I can really lead."
"If I speak up, I'll be seen as difficult."
"I'm not the type of person people naturally follow."
"I have to prove myself before I can take up space."
"Leadership is for people who are more confident than me."
"If I get it wrong, it will define me."
Part Two
Examine the Script

Keeping the belief or beliefs you identified in mind, work through each question honestly. These questions are designed to help you see the script more clearly — not to judge it.

Question 01
When did you first start believing this — and whose voice does it sound like?
Your Reflection
Question 02
How has holding this belief kept you safe, comfortable, or protected?
Your Reflection
Question 03
What has believing this cost you — in your leadership, your relationships, or your sense of what's possible?
Your Reflection
Question 04
Where in your leadership right now is this belief making decisions for you?
Your Reflection
Question 05
If this belief were a character in your leadership story, what role has it been playing — and is that the role you want it to keep playing?
Your Reflection
A Word From Your Coach

Here's what I know to be true. The beliefs you're carrying about your leadership — about what's possible, about who gets to lead, about whether things can change — weren't born with you. They were written over time. By experiences. By environments. By people who may not have had the full picture of who you are.

And because they were written, they can be rewritten.

You are not stuck with the script you inherited. As the author of your own leadership, you have the authority to examine what you've been believing — and to consciously decide what stays and what gets rewritten. Some beliefs have earned their place. Others have quietly overstayed their welcome. Only you can tell the difference.

That's not wishful thinking. That's authorship.

Part Four
Author Your Beliefs

For each belief you identified, decide whether to retain it or rewrite it. If it serves you as a leader, claim it consciously. If it doesn't, author something truer. Use the starter phrases to help you begin, or write entirely in your own voice.

Starter phrases — tap to use
"I am someone who..."
"I choose to believe..."
"My leadership is..."
"I have what it takes to..."
"Even when it's hard, I..."
"I consciously hold onto..."
The belief I'm working with
My chosen belief — in my own voice
How this belief shifts how I show up
The belief I'm working with
My chosen belief — in my own voice
How this belief shifts how I show up
The belief I'm working with
My chosen belief — in my own voice
How this belief shifts how I show up
Closing Reflection
Looking at the beliefs you've chosen to retain or rewrite — what does this tell you about the leader you are authoring?
Your Reflection