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by Alyson Meister, Morra Aarons-Mele Published April 11, 2025 in Brain Circuits • 4 min read
The following questions are not a diagnosis, but may help you reflect on how anxiety shows up in your leadership.
1. Do you often wake up with a racing mind, even when there’s no obvious reason to be worried?
2. Do you unintentionally pass your anxiety on to your team, through tone, urgency, or micromanagement?
3. Do you try to control everything or have trouble letting go, even when others are capable?
4. Do you feel you have to carry the burden alone?
5. Do you strive to be right or perfect at all costs?
6. Do you expect the worst – like getting fired or failing – even when things are going well?
7. Do you hide aspects of yourself to maintain a high-performing image?
8. Do you find yourself ruminating, overthinking, or replaying situations?
9. Do you often experience a vague but persistent sense of dread?
10. Are you noticing physical signs of stress – poor sleep, loss of focus, appetite changes, low energy, or irritability?
If you answered yes to several of these questions, you’re not alone – and you’re not broken. Anxiety is part of being human, especially in high-stakes, high-pressure roles. But that doesn’t mean you have to let it run the show. There’s no one-size-fits-all solution, but small changes can have a big impact. The following actions won’t eliminate anxiety but can help you manage it.
Recognize how anxiety operates in your life and leadership. Don’t label yourself “an anxious person” but do tune into your patterns to help you lead with more awareness and intention.
Digital interfaces such as Slack, Teams, Zoom, email, and text are designed to keep us in a state of heightened arousal. Break the digital spell by taking regular breaks away from your desk – preferably without your phone.
Just a few minutes of deep, steady breathing can help reset your body’s stress response. Tune into your pulse, your breath, your feet on the ground. It’s a simple, powerful way to return to center.
Many leaders try to hold it all together, fearing that showing emotion will look like weakness. But opening up – appropriately and with intention – can model strength and authenticity.
When you create space for others to name their stress or feelings of being overwhelmed, you help normalize them. Ask your team what they need to feel supported. You don’t have to have all the answers – just being present helps.
Sometimes anxiety needs more than self-awareness and coping strategies: it needs support. That might mean talking to a coach, mentor, or therapist. And, if anxiety is affecting your sleep, relationships, or daily functioning, it may be time to speak with a medical professional. Seeking help isn’t a sign of weakness: it shows leadership maturity and self-respect.
Anxiety exists on a spectrum. Some of it is natural and even useful. But when it becomes overwhelming or constant, it can take a toll on your performance, your relationships, and your health. Learning how to work with your anxiety – not denying it or letting it define you – can help you lead with more clarity, empathy, and effectiveness.
Professor of Leadership and Organizational Behavior at IMD
Alyson Meister is Professor of Leadership and Organizational Behavior and Director of the Future Leaders program and the Resilient Leadership Sprint, she is also co-director of the Change Management Program at IMD Business School. Specializing in the development of globally oriented, adaptive, and inclusive organizations, she has worked with executives, teams, and organizations from professional services to industrial goods and technology. She also serves as co-chair of One Mind at Work’s Scientific Advisory Committee, with a focus on advancing mental health in the workplace. Follow her on Twitter: @alymeister.
Mental-health consultant, executive and author
Speaker, workplace mental-health consultant, and author Morra Aarons-Mele helps leaders and teams turn anxiety into a superpower to lead at their highest level. An anxious achiever herself, Morra believes taking mental health seriously is a leadership strength. Recognized by Mental Health America with their Media Award (2023), she is also a LinkedIn “Top 10 Voice” in mental health and a Thinkers50 2023 Distinguished Achievement in Leadership Award nominee.
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