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Empathy Without Self-Abandonment: Unhooking from Survival Mode in Leadership and Teaching with Leila Boutaleb Brousse
Description
đź§ Episodic Synopsis
What if burnout isn’t coming from the workload—but from disconnection?
In this episode of Classroom Narratives, Dr. Joey Weisler sits down with leadership expert Leila Boutaleb Brousse, founder of Eyelee Growth and creator of the Unhooked Leadership Method, to explore what it really means to operate in “survival mode”—and why so many educators and leaders feel stuck there.
Leila challenges the idea that empathy alone is enough, introducing a critical distinction: empathy without boundaries isn’t leadership—it’s self-sacrifice. Together, they unpack how people-pleasing, decision fatigue, and chronic overextension quietly erode both performance and identity over time.
From emotional regulation to boundary-setting, this conversation offers a grounded, practical lens on how to reconnect with your “why,” reclaim your energy, and lead without losing yourself in the process.
If you’ve ever felt like you’re constantly giving but slowly disappearing in the work—this one is for you.
đź§© Show Notes (Key Ideas & Takeaways)
- Survival mode isn’t about workload—it’s about disconnection. Burnout often stems from losing connection to purpose, meaning, and identity—not just being “too busy.”
- Decision fatigue is quietly draining educators. Thousands of daily micro-decisions—academic, behavioral, emotional—leave teachers mentally and physically depleted.
- Empathy without boundaries is not empathy—it’s self-sacrifice. What many educators call “empathy” is often unregulated people-pleasing that leads to burnout.
- People-pleasing starts as care—but becomes a self-sabotager. When driven by fear, validation, or approval, it erodes confidence, leadership presence, and self-trust.
- Working at 120% becomes the expectation—not the exception. Overperforming consistently resets the baseline, making sustainable effort appear like underperformance.
- Emotional regulation is a leadership skill—not a luxury. Suppressing emotions leads to delayed reactions, inconsistency, and breakdowns in trust.
- Naming emotions reduces their intensity. Simply identifying what you’re feeling can decrease emotional intensity by up to 50%, creating space for intentional response.
- Authenticity is not “acting however you feel.” True authentic leadership is grounded in values, clarity, and intentional action—not emotional reactivity.
- Boundaries are not selfish—they are protective. They allow educators and leaders to sustain their energy, align with their values, and show up consistently.
- A simple framework for growth: Awareness → Intention → Action Real change begins with self-awareness, followed by intentional choices, and sustained through consistent action.
đź”— Show Links and Resources
Leila's website: EYELEE Growth
Leila Instagram: @leilaboutalebbrousse