This Valentine’s season marks 29 years of partnership for my husband and me — including the years before we were married. Nearly three decades of building a life together, raising a family, navigating career changes, relocations, opportunities, challenges, and more seasons of growth than either of us could have predicted at the beginning.
And like any meaningful partnership, it hasn’t been defined by sameness. In fact, quite the opposite.
We come from very different cultures, traditions, and lived experiences. Early on, those differences required curiosity, humility, and a willingness to learn from each other. Over time, what once felt unfamiliar became a source of richness. Our differences didn’t divide us — they strengthened us.
Looking back, I realize how much this mirrors leadership, coaching and change in business.
Because leadership, at its best, is not about control. It’s about partnership.
Change Happens in Seasons
When we first begin leading, many of us feel pressure to have the answers. To prove competence. To demonstrate capability. To hold things together.
But leadership evolves.
Just like relationships, careers and organizations move through seasons. There are periods of rapid growth, times of uncertainty, moments of reinvention, and phases where patience and resilience matter more than speed.
And no one navigates those seasons successfully alone.
Sustainable success — in leadership or life — comes from learning how to move through change together.
Partnership Requires Effort and Care
Long-term partnerships don’t succeed by accident.
They require:
- Honest conversations
- Mutual respect
- Space for each person to grow
- The willingness to listen and adapt
- And commitment when conditions are less than ideal
The same is true for leadership teams.
When leaders try to carry everything themselves, teams become dependent. Progress slows. Change feels heavy.
But when leaders build true partnership within their teams, something shifts. People step forward. Strengths become visible. Decisions are shared. Momentum becomes collective.
The work becomes lighter because responsibility is shared.
Strength Lives in Difference
One of the greatest gifts in my own partnership has been learning that difference is not a problem to overcome — it’s an advantage to embrace.
Different perspectives create better solutions. Different strengths fill each other’s gaps. Different experiences broaden possibility.
The same is true in the business world.
When teams learn to leverage each other’s strengths instead of competing for control or sameness, performance improves. Innovation grows. People feel seen and valued.
And change becomes something we navigate together rather than something imposed from above.
What We Think Is Possible Is Just the Beginning
If someone had told us 29 years ago where life would take us — the experiences we would share, the challenges we would overcome, the milestones we would celebrate — we likely wouldn’t have believed them.
Because the future rarely unfolds the way we imagine and we need to keep focused on the positive. When we are on the lookout for good, we find more of it.
But when people commit to moving through change together with effort, care, and respect, possibilities expand in ways we never anticipate.
In leadership, the same holds true.
You never know which partnerships will form, where your career will take you, or how your organization will evolve. But when leaders build environments grounded in trust, collaboration, and shared strength, teams achieve more than any individual could alone.
Because in leadership — as in life — success is rarely about going it alone.
It’s about building partnerships that help everyone grow.
And often, what we think is possible is just the beginning. Let life and your people surprise you!







