There’s a moment every serious mountaineer knows – not when you’re lacing your boots, or plotting your route, but when you pause halfway up, heart pounding, and look back. The distance below is staggering. The summit is still far. You’re suspended between who you were and who you’re becoming.
That moment, oddly, feels a lot like the one many men face when they’re offered coaching.
From the outside, everything looks fine. Successful career. High-performing team. Well-tailored suit. A full calendar. But internally? That’s often where the terrain gets rugged – full of silent questions, unseen fatigue, and the creeping suspicion that the peak they’re chasing might not be the one that matters most.
Yet when coaching is suggested, many men resist.
Not because they’re arrogant.
Not because they’re closed-minded.
But because it’s personal.
1. The myth of self-sufficiency.
We’ve been taught that strength looks like stoicism. That real leaders go it alone. Coaching threatens that illusion – offering a mirror instead of a sword.
2. The ego’s last stand.
When you’ve built an identity around competence, performance and control, asking for help can feel like a betrayal of the very traits that made you successful.
3. The fear of what lies beneath.
Coaching doesn’t just polish the surface – it digs. And that digging might uncover doubts, regrets, or questions long buried under deadlines and deliverables.
The very resistance is the signal.
Men who don’t fear coaching probably don’t need it as much as those who do. Because resistance is not the enemy – it’s a compass. It points directly to the places where growth is most possible.
The best climbers aren’t fearless. They’re those who learn to trust the guide, carry only what’s essential, and keep climbing even when it gets uncomfortable.
Marriages start to deepen, not just function.
Teams move from compliant to committed.
Health, both physical and mental, begins to matter again.
Faith and meaning find a place in leadership.
Life starts to feel aligned, not just managed.
Coaching doesn’t fix you. You’re not broken.
But it helps you stop denying parts of yourself that have long been calling for your attention.
Maybe you’ve been offered coaching and felt that flare of resistance. Maybe you’re considering it for someone else and sense their discomfort. That’s normal. It’s even healthy. But it’s not a reason to retreat. It’s a reason to pause – and then move forward.
Because coaching isn’t a sign of weakness.
It’s a sign you’re ready for a different kind of strength.
💭 Men – have you ever resisted coaching? What held you back?
If this resonates, reply to this post with a 🙋 or share a word that describes what’s stopped you (e.g. "fear", "time", "not sure").
📩 If you’re a leader, coach, or friend who sees the quiet struggle in someone else, reach out. I offer obligation-free conversations to explore whether coaching might serve them – or you.
💭 Want to bring the conversation on men’s mental health to your organisation?
I offer , a keynote designed to help corporate men break the stigma, build resilience, and take practical steps toward mental well-being.
📩 DM me to explore bringing this talk to your team.
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