You feel confused, deflated, upset and like a failure!
Watch this video, you may feel this pain and here’s why!
“You’re micromanaging again.”
Few words cut deeper for a leader who genuinely cares about getting it right.
It feels like criticism — but beneath that sting is something older:
the body’s instinct to stay in control when things feel uncertain.
Micromanagement isn’t a flaw.
It’s a survival pattern.
When the nervous system senses risk, it moves into control mode.
For many, that wiring began early when being responsible or perfect earned safety or approval.
It taught the body: control = safety.
In adulthood, it reappears as checking, fixing, or managing everything —
a behavioural echo of anxiety or shame stored in the body.
“I must look good / be perfect.”
Underneath lies the longing to feel respected and safe.
Through nervous system regulation, we learn that calm confidence — not control — builds trust.
In my Ayla Approach leadership training,
we explore how control isn’t the problem — it’s the signal.
A cue from the body that safety needs restoring before collaboration can thrive.
When leaders meet their physiology first, their teams feel it instantly.
✨ Body first → Brain follows → Performance rises.
💭 What might happen if you treated your need to control not as a flaw, but as a cue to reconnect with safety — in yourself and in others?
Message me “Interested” and I’ll share some Ayla neural techniques to help you start today.
Dr. Vanessa Harding | Transformational Entrepreneur & Body-Brain Performance Coach
Dr. Vanessa Harding is a visionary leader in science driven body-brain coaching, empowering high…
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