To Lead Well, Be Like Water
There’s a version of leadership that looks like holding firm. Unmoved. Certain. Whether you’re leading a team, a household, a community or just yourself through something hard — the cultural instruction tends to be the same: stay the course, project confidence, don’t waver.
And in a world that rewards decisiveness and reads certainty as competence, it’s easy to mistake rigidity for strength.
But watch what actually breaks under pressure. It’s rarely the flexible thing.
Bruce Lee understood this. Not just as a martial artist — as a thinker. “Be like water,” he said. “You put water into a cup, it becomes the cup. You put it in a teapot, it becomes the teapot.” Water doesn’t lose itself by changing shape. It’s still water. And over time, it’s water — not rock — that does the reshaping.
He was drawing on Taoism, specifically the Tao Te Ching, which observed centuries ago that nothing is softer than water and nothing more capable of wearing down what is hard. But the idea didn’t stay in ancient philosophy. It kept surfacing — because it keeps being true.
Why Now
We are living through a period that demands more adaptation than most of us were trained for.
Work is less linear. Relationships require more navigation. The pace of change means that yesterday’s certainties regularly become today’s renegotiations. And the self we built in more stable conditions — the one with fixed ideas about who we are, how things should go, what we can handle — keeps getting tested.
The psychological cost of rigidity in this environment is well-documented. When we cling to a fixed sense of how things should be, we spend enormous energy managing the gap between expectation and reality. That gap is where exhaustion lives. Where anxiety compounds. Where people find themselves doing more and feeling less capable than ever.
What psychology calls psychological flexibility — the capacity to stay present with difficulty, hold experience without being overrun by it, and keep moving toward what matters — turns out to be one of the strongest predictors of wellbeing and performance we have. Kashdan and Rottenberg (2010) describe it as a fundamental aspect of health, noting that flexible people rely on personally meaningful values to guide decisions and actions rather than exhausting finite energy in pursuit of the perfect emotional state.
Research from Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) consistently shows that psychological flexibility moderates stress, burnout, and chronic avoidance — with a landmark meta-analysis finding it correlated at .42 with outcomes ranging from mental health to job performance (Hayes et al., 2006).
The science is pointing to something the Taoists intuited: adapting your form without losing your direction is not weakness. It’s a core human skill.
The Rock Strategy
The trouble is that most of us were never taught this directly. We were taught to fix the problem, manage the feeling, resolve the uncertainty. Push harder when things resist.
And force works — until it doesn’t. Until the resistance is a grief that won’t be argued with, or a relationship that won’t respond to control, or a role that keeps shifting under your feet no matter how tightly you grip it.
The cost of maintaining certainty we don't actually have is higher than most people realise — and it tends to be paid in exhaustion, disconnection, and the quiet erosion of trust.
What the research on emotional regulation shows is that suppression — pushing difficult internal experience away — doesn’t reduce it. It amplifies it. Gross and Levenson’s foundational work demonstrated that suppressing emotional responses leaves the subjective experience of negative emotion largely intact, while actually increasing physiological arousal and diminishing positive affect (Gross & Levenson, 1997). The emotion doesn’t dissolve under pressure. It goes underground and resurfaces with more charge.
Being like water means something different. It means contact without fusion — feeling the current without becoming it. Letting a difficult moment be what it is, staying grounded in your values, and finding movement from there. Not bypassing the experience. Moving with it.
What It Looks Like in Practice
Think about Ted Lasso — the fictional football coach who arrived at his job without relevant expertise, without the respect of his players, and without any illusion of control over the outcome. What he had was curiosity, a clear sense of what he stood for, and the capacity to adapt without collapsing. He became, in many ways, a masterclass in psychological flexibility played out across a season. Audiences responded to him so strongly in part because that quality is so rare — and so recognisable as genuine leadership when you actually see it.
It shows up in ordinary life too, in moments most people don’t clock as leadership at all.
It’s the person who receives hard feedback and, instead of deflecting or collapsing, gets quiet for a moment and then asks a question, to understand more, not defend or attack. It’s the parent holding their anxiety about a teenager’s choices without letting that anxiety become control. It’s the athlete who makes a mistake in the final quarter and returns to the next play without carrying the last one.
It’s also internal. The capacity to notice a thought — I’m going to fail at this, I’m not enough for this, this is too much — and not treat it as instruction. To observe it, let it pass, and choose a response that’s grounded rather than reactive.
Research on emotion regulation and leadership by Torrence and Connelly (2019) found that suppression was negatively associated with leadership performance, while cognitive reappraisal — the ability to relate flexibly to one’s own experience — was positively linked to it. The implication is clear,
How leaders manage their inner world matters as much as what they do externally.
These aren’t always loud or big actions. A pause where there used to be a reaction. A question where there used to be a defence. An acknowledgement where there used to be avoidance. The cumulative effect is significant — in how people experience themselves, and how others experience them.
Flow, Not Drift
Bruce Lee also said water can flow, or it can crash.
This is the part that gets lost when “be like water” softens into passive acceptance. Water isn’t directionless. It moves with enormous force when the channel is right. The flexibility is in the form, not the intention.
Water doesn't lose itself by filling the cup. It's still water.
Psychologically, this maps to knowing and being guided by our core values. Knowing what matters — not as a vague aspiration but as a lived, behavioural commitment — is what gives adaptation its direction. Without it, flexibility becomes drift. With it, the capacity to move and adjust becomes a genuine advantage: you can respond to what’s actually in front of you, rather than the scenario you planned for.
Pema Chödrön, the Buddhist teacher whose book When Things Fall Apart has found a whole new generation of readers, puts it plainly: the only way to find solid ground is to stop looking for it beneath your feet and start developing it within yourself. Different tradition, same principle.
The question isn’t whether to be moved by life. You will be. The question is whether you have the inner stability — a sense of self not contingent on every external condition holding still — to keep finding your shape.
Like water.