Part 3: Identity and Choice - The Authority beneath it All

March 19, 2026

There comes a point where the success and circumstance of the life you’ve built no longer answer the questions you’re asking.

Not because it’s broken.
But because something underneath it has shifted.

What once felt like progress now feels like maintenance. What once felt like identity now feels like habit.

And the question is no longer - “How do I succeed?” But rather - “Who am I, when this changes?

In the first article, we explored how easily identity can become entangled with circumstance - how what happens around us begins to define who we believe we are.
In the second, we moved into a more seductive space - success - and questioned whether it is not just failure, but achievement itself, that quietly anchors identity in ways we seldom interrogate.

Now, in this final piece, the question becomes more personal - and perhaps more confronting. If identity is shaped by both circumstance and success - what is left when we choose neither?

Because at some point, whether through disruption or awareness, life will ask us to stand apart from both.

The Subtle Drift

Identity rarely collapses overnight.

It drifts.

• A role becomes a label.

• A season becomes a definition.

• A result becomes a reflection of worth.

Circumstance tells us: This is who you are because of what has happened to you.

Success tells us: This is who you are because of what you have achieved.

Both feel true. Both carry evidence. Both are reinforced by the world around us. And yet, both are still incomplete. This is not a philosophical nuance - it is a lived tension.

Because when circumstance shifts, or success fades - and both inevitably do - the identity built on them begins to feel unstable. Not wrong. Just fragile.

The Cost of Borrowed Identity

There is a subtle cost to allowing identity to be borrowed from external anchors.

It limits freedom.

If my identity is tied to circumstance, I become reactive - shaped by events rather than grounded within them.

If my identity is tied to success, I become protective - needing to maintain, defend, or replicate what once validated me.

In both cases, identity becomes something to manage rather than something to live from.

This is where many leaders - and many men, in particular - find themselves in midlife.

Capable. Proven. Respected.

And yet, carrying an undercurrent of unease:

• What happens if this changes?

• What if I am no longer this successful?

• What if I have outgrown this environment?

• What, then, remains of me?

These are not questions of failure. They are questions of identity maturity.

The Third Layer: Identity as Choice

If circumstance and success are not sufficient foundations, then what is? This is where the conversation shifts - from what has shaped you and what you have achieved to something far more foundational:

What you choose.

Not in the sense of decision-making alone, but in the deeper sense of orientation.

• What do you stand for when conditions are unstable?

• Who are you becoming when no one is watching?

• What do you practice when there is no external reward?

This is where identity begins to detach from environment and outcome, and root itself in something more enduring.

In Dare to Lead, Brené Brown speaks about living from values rather than performing for approval. This distinction, though subtle, has a significant effect, shifting the focus of identity from external validation to internal consistency.

Similarly, in Purpose: The Starting Point of Great Companies, Mourkogiannis suggests that a true sense of purpose becomes a guiding principle, going beyond market conditions and short-term goals. This idea also applies to individuals.

When a person’s identity is based on their chosen values and the purpose they pursue, it becomes less vulnerable to the ups and downs of life and the temptations of success.

Not immune - but more stable.

The Tension We Must Hold

It would be easy, at this point, to dismiss circumstance and success altogether. But that would be a mistake. They matter.

Our circumstances shapes us, often in ways that build resilience, perspective, and empathy. Success affirms our capability, it creates more opportunity, influence, and momentum.

The goal is not to reject them but to relate to them differently.

To allow circumstance to inform, but not define. To allow success to enable, but not determine. This is a tension, not a resolution. And it requires awareness.

Because the pull back into old patterns is strong. It is easier to be the person shaped by events. It is easier to be the person validated by results.

It is harder - but far more powerful - to be the person who chooses who they are, independent of both.

A More Grounded Identity

So what does this look like, practically?

It is less dramatic than one might expect. It is not a reinvention. It is not a declaration.

It is a series of small, consistent shifts:

• Noticing when your sense of worth rises and falls with outcomes.

• Catching the moments where you default to “this is just how things are” rather than “this is how I choose to respond.”

• Reconnecting with practices that reflect who you want to be, not just what you want to achieve.

It is choosing presence over performance. Integrity over impression. Alignment over approval.

And perhaps most importantly, it is allowing your definition of success to evolve without experiencing it as a threat to your identity.

Because as we touched on previously:
Our individual definition of success can change without threatening our identity.
Status often cannot.

That line exposes the difference between living from identity, and living for validation.

The Confidence of Choice

There is a different kind of confidence that emerges when identity is no longer outsourced.

It is grounded - less performative, less reactive, less dependent on being seen.

It does not need constant reinforcement and does not collapse under pressure, it holds.

Not because circumstances are favourable. Not because success is guaranteed.

But because it is rooted in something chosen, not assigned.

Where This Leaves Us

Across these three articles, we have moved through three layers:

1. Identity and Circumstance - how the world shapes us

2. Identity and Success - how outcomes define us

3. Identity and Choice - how we ultimately anchor ourselves

This is not a linear journey. It is a continual one. At different points in life, one layer will feel more dominant than the others. But the invitation remains the same - to become aware of where your identity is currently anchored - and to decide, consciously, whether that is where you want it to be.

A Final Question

Not just a reflective question, but a directional one.

If circumstance changes…

If success shifts…

Who are you choosing to be?

Because in the end, that choice - however understated it may be - is the one thing that remains consistently yours.

#Midlife #Leadership #Identity #Purpose #Burnout #PersonalGrowth

📷 StockCake

Designed by Haloweb
|Terms of Service|Privacy Policy
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram