When the Ground Shifts Beneath You

Written by Orvin Kimbrough | May 28, 2026

There are seasons in leadership when you’re not managing strategy you’re managing volatility. 

You’re navigating situations that move faster than your comfort, your planning, or your projections. And the truth is this: anyone can lead when conditions are stable. But leadership reveals itself when the facts are shifting, the pressure is rising, and the decisions have real consequences.

This week, I was reminded of something I learned long ago:

Leadership is not about avoiding hard realities.
Leadership is about absorbing reality without being overwhelmed by it.

We’re working through a situation right now that seems to change every time you examine it. Compliance questions. Financial strain. Legal considerations. A borrower who has simply run out of resources. The kind of situation where the ground keeps moving and the leader’s job is to stay steady.

Your first instinct is often to fix it quickly. To move. To push.
But real leadership slows the moment down long enough to see the full field.

Here’s what I know:

1. Chaos doesn’t excuse carelessness.

Even when answers shift, clarity cannot. People need transparency, not perfection.

2. Pressure doesn’t diminish stewardship.

When you’re responsible for the weight of a system, panic is not an option. Someone must remain clear-eyed and that someone is the leader.

3. You can’t avoid hard truths.

Sometimes the most responsible decision is the least glamorous one. Receivership. Restructuring. Loss recognition. These aren’t failures they’re stewardship tools.

But here’s the deeper leadership truth:

When the ground shifts beneath you, the most important thing is staying grounded within yourself.

A steady mind.
A clean motive.
A consistent process.

Anyone can lead when the sun is shining.
But it’s the storm that reveals whether you’re leading from pressure or from principle.

So let me ask you today:

Are you preparing your team for the weather… or only for the forecast?

Because forecasts change.
Weather arrives.
And real leaders build systems, people, and courage for both.