
lost & proFound
Writings on discovery through connection
This is a Blog for leaders and learners, performers and all people seeking a deeper sense of Connection and Discovery in your life.
You can also view these Blogs as videos on my Youtube channel DCH_Productions linked below. Happy Leading. Happy Living.
Feedback, Not Failure: How to Build a Culture of Constructive Critique
Failure. Just the word is enough to make most of us wince.
From childhood spelling tests to quarterly performance reviews, the fear of getting it wrong has been baked into how we show up, grow up, and (far too often) lead. We equate critique with condemnation, feedback with final judgment. And as a result, we end up avoiding the very conversations that could unlock our greatest growth.
But here’s the truth: feedback isn’t failure. When done well, it’s fuel.
At DCH Coaching, I spend a lot of time helping leaders rewire how they think about feedback. Because if your team equates critique with danger, they’ll protect themselves instead of improving themselves. They’ll play it safe. They’ll say less. They’ll hide the very insights that could move your culture forward.
And that silence? It’s expensive.
Burnout Is Not a Badge: Reclaiming Energy in a Culture of Overwork
We love a good hustle. The all-nighter. The back-to-back Zooms. The inbox zero badge of honor. In many professional spaces, exhaustion has become a status symbol. If you're not running on fumes, are you even trying?
But here's the catch: burnout isn't a badge. It's a warning light. And leaders (especially the most passionate, purpose-driven ones) are often the last to see it flashing.
At DCH Coaching, I've seen the pattern play out across industries. Leaders who once led with fire now run on smoke. Teams that once thrived now barely survive. And behind it all? A culture that confuses depletion with dedication.
Legacy Leadership: How the Past Shapes the Way We Lead Forward
History isn’t just a storybook. It’s a mirror, and sometimes a magnifying glass. As Juneteenth approaches, many leaders glance back at the past with reverence. Fewer, however, ask what it means to truly lead forward with the weight of that past in view.
At DCH Coaching, I work with leaders who want to create meaningful impact. And around this time each year, there’s a particular invitation worth sitting with: How do we honor the legacy of freedom, resilience, and resistance in our leadership today?
Because legacy isn’t a monument. It’s a practice.
The Listening Leader: Why the Best Leaders Speak Less
Somewhere between the Zoom echo chambers and the Slack noise, a quiet truth is whispering to us:
The best leaders are often the quietest ones.
Not the ones with the grandstanding monologues, or the ones who dominate the whiteboard, but those who know how to hold a moment, hold a gaze, and—most importantly—hold space for others.
I’ve coached enough leaders to know: there’s a kind of magic in leaders who listen well. It’s not passive. It’s not weak. It’s not a placeholder for the "real" work of leading. It is the real work. And yet, in a world that rewards the loudest voice in the room, listening can feel almost radical.
Getting Lost & Pro-found: What Nature Teaches Us About Burnout and Balance
Let me take you back about a year or so ago. I was standing in a redwood grove in the Muir Woods of California, looking up. Way up. These ancient trees, some of them older than our country, were unmoved by the noise of the modern world. No Slack notifications. No urgent emails. Just stillness. Immensity. And an unapologetic presence.
I had been fried before that trip. Crispy. Burnout was no longer knocking; it had unpacked a suitcase and settled in. But in those woods, something shifted. Not all at once, not magically…but enough. Enough to remember what it felt like to breathe without performing.