254, Honesty Over Image: Leading Through Grief, Discomfort, and the Messy Middle with Beth Cannon
Update: 2025-09-29
Description
Leadership doesn’t pause for grief, betrayal, or personal storms. In this deeply vulnerable conversation, Chanie sits down with Beth Cannon to talk about what it means to lead when life unravels. From walking through the terminal illness of a loved one, to staff exits and leadership mistakes, Beth shares her “discomfort zone” season and the messy middle of showing up for her people while falling apart inside.
This episode is not about perfection, it’s about presence. It’s about choosing honesty over image, showing up when you don’t have it all together, and finding systems and rhythms that carry your school (and your soul) through seasons of chaos.
What You’ll Learn in This Episode:
- Why “waiting until everything is perfect” is leadership avoidance
- How to keep showing up when grief and business crises collide
- The difference between accountability and ownership in staff leadership
- Why leaders must choose honesty over image if they want trust and culture to hold
- How to find outer-circle people who can lead you through your own fo
Key Insights
- Culture isn’t built on polish. It’s built on consistency, clarity, and shared standards.
- Grief and leadership can coexist. You can hold heartbreak in one hand and still lead with purpose in the other.
- Leadership is a mirror. Staff accountability gaps often expose where owners haven’t built the right rhythms.
- You don’t wait for perfect conditions. Growth happens in the middle of the storm, not after it passes.
Memorable Quotes
- “I wasn’t replacing a role. I was reacting to a wound.” – Beth Cannon
- “You have to choose honesty over image, because the day when everything is perfect doesn’t exist.” – Beth Cannon
- “Schools don’t need leaders who wait for the fog to clear. They need leaders who keep walking.” – Chanie Wilschanski
Why This Matters for School Leaders
- Stops the cycle of waiting for perfect conditions before leading
- Models vulnerability without abdicating responsibility
- Builds staff trust through honesty and accountability, not polish
- Anchors leaders in rhythms that hold during grief, betrayal, or transition
Resources & Next Steps
- Reflect: Where are you waiting for things to “settle” before you lead?
- Revisit your staff accountability systems: Are they true ownership, or excuses and follow-up cycles?
- Connect with Beth Cannon: bethcannonspeaks.com | Instagram & Facebook: @bethcannonspeaks
Comments
In Channel