“Average people hate high achievers, and high achievers hate average thinking.”
– Ed Mylett
Chameleons turn green when they’re on the grass. Brown when they’re on the dirt.
Their ability to blend in is what helps them survive. But let me tell you something – great leaders weren’t built to survive… They were built to stand out and LEAD!
If you’re trying to become a world-class leader, but you’re still obsessed with blending in… Still trying to make everyone happy? Still clinging to your old bad habits? Still dabbling in what feels safe?
You’re in chameleon mode, and that’s literally killing your growth.
Here’s the brutal truth that I must share.
1. Most average leaders don’t want to give up their old ways.
2. They don’t want to shed the habits that got them to “good enough”.
3. They don’t want to face the discomfort of having to level up.
They’ll go to every conference. Read the books. Watch the reels. Sit in meetings. But when it’s time to actually shift – they blend in with the crowd again.
Why? Why do people get stuck in this pattern?
Because blending in is easier than becoming better.
But feel this one… You can’t lead transformation if you refuse to transform.
You can’t build a winning culture if you’re still operating in comfort.
You can’t expect your team to level up if you’re still trying to survive like a chameleon instead of leading like a lion!
“Don’t downgrade your dream just to fit your reality. Upgrade your conviction to match your calling.”
– Craig Groeschel
World-class leadership is costly.
It will cost you your ego.
It will cost you popularity.
It will cost you convenience, shortcuts, and excuses.
But… It will pay you back in multiples.
So what kind of leader do you want to be? One who blends in to stay safe, or one who breaks out to change the game?
You have to choose. I say let the chameleons go camouflage.
Now, more than ever the world needs bold leaders to rise up and lead the change!
Be the leader bold enough to break the pattern, raise the standard, and shift the room just by walking into it. You weren’t built to blend in. You were called to build what others are too afraid to even speak out loud.