Stop trying to change people and start becoming the person God called you to be. Real leadership flows from character, faith, and the courage to let go.
You can’t transform someone who isn’t ready. But you can transform how you show up for them.
Most of us have spent way too much energy trying to “fix” people—partners, friends, coworkers.
We see their potential, believe in what they could be, and think that if we just try hard enough… they’ll change.
They won’t. Not like that.
People don’t change on our timeline. They change when the pain of staying the same becomes greater than the courage it takes to change.
So stop wasting your energy on a battle that isn’t yours to fight.
Trying to change people is often a subtle form of control.
And that striving for control is exhausting, isn’t it?
Influence, on the other hand, is freeing. And it comes from leading by example.
When you level up your own character, energy, and clarity, others take notice.
They may rise with you. They may not. But your peace isn’t tied to their growth. It's anchored in your obedience to your own call.
Jesus gave us an interesting metaphor.
“Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother’s eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the plank out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye.” (Matthew 7:3,5)
Jesus is talking about hypocrisy and judgment, but he’s also talking about examining oneself instead of obsessing over another.
Here’s a pro-level insight: If you want to encourage change, do it with praise, not pressure.
People thrive when they feel seen, not shamed.
Dale Carnegie knew this decades ago (you can read it in his book “How to Win Friends and Influence People).
And neuroscience backs it up today.
So when someone steps up, acknowledge it. Authentically.
That one moment of recognition could do more than ten hours of nagging ever could.
You’re not called to change people—you’re called to love them.
To challenge them, yes.
To encourage them, yes.
But ultimately, to entrust them to God.
Remember: even Jesus didn’t force change. He invited it.
Let your faith give you the strength to walk away from trying to force outcomes.
Let it give you the courage to show up fully as you are—and let others walk their own path, in their own time.
That’s where your power begins.
So today, drop the burden of changing others.
Pick up the mantle of becoming the person God called you to be.
Build the business.
Lead your family.
Show up with integrity.
Grow in wisdom.
That’s the kind of change that multiplies. That’s leadership. That’s legacy.