(Take Your Self-Audit)
Dear Beautiful Soul,
I see you.
Not just your achievements or your carefully curated LinkedIn profile.
I see the woman behind the titles, beyond the metrics, beneath the mask of "having it all together."
I see you at 3AM, when the world is quiet but your mind isn't.
When the questions you can't ask in the boardroom become too loud to ignore.
"Why does achieving everything I wanted feel like losing myself?"
"When did success start feeling this heavy?"
I know this journey intimately.
Not because I'm another coach with strategies and systems (though yes, those matter).
But because I've walked alongside women who dared to question everything they built.
Like Lorraine, who found herself in the darkest place imaginable both personally and professionally.
Today, she's not just surviving; she's reaching heights she "didn't even realize she was looking for."
Her words, not mine:
"What Baz does is life altering. He reached my heart, my soul, and allowed me to come alive again."
Or Angela, who transformed her relationship with power entirely.
She stopped pushing through exhaustion and started leading from authentic presence.
Now her team doesn't just respect her they're inspired by her whole, unfiltered truth.
Then there's Sabrina, who discovered what happens when you stop trying to fit into old leadership models.
"Baz doesn't just offer advice," she shares, "he ignites a fire within. He empowers you to unlock unprecedented potential not just in yourself, but in your entire organization."
This isn't just about executive burnout or stress management.
Those are just symptoms of a deeper truth.
This is about reclaiming your soul in the midst of success.
About remembering who you were before the world told you who to be.
About leading from a place of power that doesn't require perfection.
I've watched women step into boardrooms not with rehearsed speeches, but with unshakeable presence.
I've seen them make million-dollar decisions from a place of inner knowing, not endless analysis.
I've witnessed them build global teams while staying deeply connected to themselves.
Your success got you here.
But your truth will take you further.
You don't need another strategy.
You need permission to lead differently.
To breathe differently.
To succeed differently.
To be differently.
The transformation you're seeking isn't about adding more to your already full plate.
It's about coming home to the woman you've always been beneath the achievements.
Ready to remember who you are beyond the titles?
With deep understanding and unwavering belief in your next chapter,
Baz
P.S. The fact that you're still reading means your soul knows something your schedule hasn't admitted yet.
It's time for real change.
Not the kind that looks good on paper, but the kind that feels true in your bones.

Hi I'm Baz...

I know what it's like to look successful on the outside while falling apart on the inside.
My journey from British military veteran to rock bottom taught me the hardest truth, sometimes you have to lose everything to find yourself.
After my own dark night of the soul battling depression, facing homelessness, and questioning everything I discovered something powerful.
Real transformation isn't about pushing harder. It's about coming home to yourself.
Today, I guide high-achieving women from exhaustion to embodied leadership. Featured in Yahoo, CEO Weekly, Women Leaders Magazine, and Digital Journal, my work goes beyond traditional coaching.
Not because I have all the answers, but because I understand the questions that keep you up at 3AM.
This isn't about adding more strategies to your life. It's about remembering who you were before the world told you who to be.
Ready to come home to yourself?
Begin With The Private Reset Ritual
Join hundreds of female executives who started their transformation here.
No pressure. No performance. Just presence.
(Start sleeping better in 5 days or less)

Is this you? You walk out of a meeting, your heart pounding. Not because it was a high-stakes negotiation, but because you disagreed with someone. The internal monologue starts immediately: “They think I’m difficult. They probably don’t like me now. I should have just kept quiet.”
This isn’t just insecurity. It’s the silent collapse. It's that gut-level, nervous system dread that whispers your value is directly tied to your performance and, more critically, to others' approval of it. This fear of being disliked becomes the invisible force directing your career, forcing you to sidestep necessary conflict, over-perform to the point of burnout, and shrink your own vision to keep the peace. You feel it in your body a tightness in your chest, a knot in your stomach. It's exhausting. And it's costing you everything.
Act I: The Hidden Pattern – Your Nervous System’s Vicious Cycle
For the leader who feels that relentless pressure to perform, this fear creates a constant state of internal conflict. Your natural drive for success gets tangled up in an exhaustive effort to manage how everyone perceives you. It’s a battle fought in the nervous system, not the intellect.
This has nothing to do with logic. It’s that gut-level anxiety that if you pause, set a firm boundary, or make an unpopular but necessary choice, you’ll be fundamentally misjudged. The internal monologue is relentless: “If I stop performing, I’ll disappear.”
That gut-wrenching fear of being disliked? It isn’t a character flaw. It’s a biological command, hardwired into your nervous system for one reason: survival. For our ancestors, social rejection was a literal death sentence. Being cast out from the tribe meant losing access to food, shelter, and protection.
Your brain evolved to treat social threats with the same life-or-death urgency as physical threats. The amygdala, your brain’s ancient alarm system, doesn't distinguish between a saber-toothed tiger and a disapproving look from a board member. It just screams DANGER and floods your body with survival signals. This happens below the level of conscious thought, driven by a primal need for safety. For high-achieving women, this creates a constant state of low-grade panic, where you’re always scanning for social cues to ensure your position in the "tribe" is secure.
To truly grasp this, we look at the nervous system through the lens of Polyvagal Theory. When your brain perceives a social threat, it cycles through a few options: fight, flight, freeze, or fawn. The fawn response is that instinctual impulse to appease a potential threat to avoid conflict and maintain connection.
It’s the very definition of people-pleasing. It’s a pre-cognitive, nervous system-driven strategy to manufacture safety.
That urge to immediately agree, to over-deliver on a project, or to smooth over tension in a meeting isn't a conscious choice. It's an automatic survival pattern kicking in, designed to de-escalate what your nervous system perceives as a social threat.
This instinct becomes a trap. Research shows that the intense fear of negative evaluation can cause behaviors that others, ironically, perceive as less likable. It’s a vicious cycle. You can learn more about the research behind this social dynamic here.
Knowing the why behind your fear is the diagnosis. The RAMS Method™ is the treatment an actionable framework to lead from deep, internal authority instead of gnawing anxiety. This isn't about growing a thick skin. It’s about building a foundation of self-worth so solid that the noise of external opinions no longer steers your ship.
We focus on Results, Attitude, Mastery, and Systems.
The first move is to stop outsourcing your sense of value. Your worth isn't measured by applause. It’s defined by your integrity, your vision, and your impact. Start by defining what a “win” looks like foryou, separate from anyone else’s opinion.
A successful meeting: Is it one where everyone likes your idea? Or is it one where you guided an honest, tough conversation that moved a critical project forward?
Effective feedback: Is it delivering a soft message to keep someone comfortable? Or is it giving direct, compassionate critique that helps a team member grow?
When you consciously rewrite these internal score cards, you anchor your self-worth in actions you can control, not reactions you can’t. This is a fundamental step in dismantling the fear of being disliked.
Feel that jolt of anxiety before a difficult conversation? That’s your nervous system hijacking your leadership. Will power is useless here. You need somatic tools body-based techniques to send a signal of safety back to your brain.
One of the most powerful is the Physiological Sigh. Research from Stanford has proven its effectiveness at rapidly calming the body's stress response.
Here’s how you do it:
Take two sharp, quick inhales through your nose.
Follow with one long, slow, controlled exhale through your mouth.
Repeat two or three times before a high-stakes situation.
This simple action physically breaks the mental panic loop. It allows you to operate from your prefrontal cortex the home of logic and strategy instead of your reactive amygdala.
Real leadership demands clear, unapologetic communication. Boundaries aren't walls. They are clear instructions on how people can engage with you successfully. Use simple, direct language. No long apologies. No over-explaining.
Instead of: "I'm so sorry, my plate is completely overflowing, and I feel terrible, but I don't think I can..."
Try: "I don't have the capacity to take that on right now."
Instead of: "I was just wondering if maybe we could circle back on this?"
Try: "To move forward, I need your feedback by Thursday at 4 PM."
This isn't just a change in wording; it's a declaration of your professional sovereignty. It's a system for protecting your energy and focus. Our guide offers more strategies on how to set boundaries at work with confidence.
When you combine a strong internal validation system (Results), somatic tools (Attitude), and clear communication frameworks (Mastery & Systems), you build a comprehensive practice for leading without the draining fear of disapproval. This is the path to reclaiming your authority. This often connects to perfectionistic tendencies that high-achievers face. You can explore our guide on overcoming perfectionism for high-achieving women for deeper insights.
This journey isn’t about erasing the fear of being disliked. That instinct is baked into our biology.
The real work is to shift your relationship with it. It’s learning to hear its whisper without letting it hijack the microphone. Authentic leadership isn’t being immune to disapproval; it's becoming resilient to the possibility of it. Your power expands the moment your decisions are guided by your own internal authority, not by a frantic scramble to manage what others think. This is the shift from a reactive state to a sovereign state of grounded, intentional action.
Ultimately, true leadership is a return to yourself. It involves stripping away the layers of people-pleasing and performance that have masked your genuine power. This isn't just another career strategy. It's a reclamation of your energy, your vision, and your integrity.
This process can be tied to deeper social phobias. Gelotophobia, the specific fear of being laughed at, is more common in societies where shame is a tool for social control, adding a heavy cultural layer to a personal feeling. You can learn more about the sociological roots of this fear.
A leader who trusts her own regulated nervous system makes different choices. Her actions are cleaner and more impactful.
She gives direct, compassionate feedback because her goal is growth, not her own comfort.
She holds firm boundaries because she respects her own capacity, modeling that respect for her team.
She innovates and takes risks, knowing her worth isn't on the line with any single outcome.
This isn't about becoming cold. It's about cultivating the deep discernment to know that your value is not up for a vote. It is a fixed asset. Your impact comes from your clarity, not your universal appeal.
This is the new standard of leadership one where your decisions are aligned with your deepest values, not your oldest fears. It's time to stop managing how you are seen and start directing where you are going. This is your invitation to return to yourself and lead from that powerful, centered place. The internal struggles of overcoming imposter syndrome for women executives are closely related to these challenges.
The goal isn't to remove a fundamental human fear. The real work is to change your relationship with it. You can dial down its volume so it no longer runs the show. Instead of being driven by fear, you learn to see it, acknowledge it, and then choose your move from a place of clarity. It becomes a data point, not a director.
This shift isn't about becoming a cold tyrant. True leadership is about developing the internal discernment to know which feedback is valuable and which is just noise. It’s about being so anchored in your values that you can make tough calls with compassion even when it's unpopular. This kind of clarity builds far more trust than people-pleasing ever could.
Rewiring these deep patterns is a journey. However, you can feel an immediate shift in awareness. You start catching old patterns in real-time. You can see meaningful changes in your behavior like holding a boundary or speaking up with an unpopular idea within weeks of consistent practice. Regulating your nervous system is a skill that gets stronger with every repetition.
True leadership is an inside job. It starts when you reclaim your internal authority from the constant pull of external validation. At Baz Porter, we guide accomplished women through this exact process, helping you build an unshakable foundation for a legacy defined by integrity and impact.
Discover if the RAMS Method™ is your next step to sovereign leadership.
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