💡 Joy is a Key Life and Leadership Accelerator
“Joy, not fear, fuels sustainable leadership.” — Rare Leadership
When you hear the word joy, you might not think of it as a key component in business, leadership, marriage, or parenting. I can almost hear some of my business friends saying, “What does that have to do with profits or expansion?”
Read on. 🌊
⚙️ Why This Is Important
Many leaders don’t realize that—in both life and work—they’re driving without an accelerator pedal. Instead of forward movement, they’re coasting… or worse, sinking. Fear of failure. Fear of people’s expectations. Fear of not being enough. These are like stormy waves that pull us under and leave us gasping.
Warner and Wilder remind us: “Leadership travels at the speed of joy.”
Joy doesn’t remove the waves, but it gives us something solid to hold onto. Leaders anchored in joy can breathe, reorient, and then lead others with steadiness—at home and at work.
🌿 Building Joy in Practice
Joy isn’t accidental—it’s cultivated. Warner and Wilder point to brain science showing that joy lives in the relational circuits of the brain, and we can train those circuits to activate more quickly and more often.
Here are two simple, science-backed ways to strengthen joy when fear’s waves rise:
-
A Spirit of Thanksgiving 🙌🏼
Gratitude literally rewires your brain. It releases dopamine—the brain’s “feel-good” neurotransmitter—that reignites joy and restores healthy relational engagement. Gratitude shifts us from survival mode to connection mode.
-
Breathing Exercises 🌬️
Intentional, deep breathing calms the nervous system and quiets fear’s voice. A few slow breaths can help you recover from frustration, anger, or insecurity and return to relational steadiness.
🧭 A Tool: The RARE Path
Warner and Wilder describe four uncommon habits that help leaders grab hold of joy when stuck in unhealthy relational patterns:
- R — Remain Relational: Stay connected, even in conflict. When tempted to check out, isolate or become defensive, unleash empathy or ask a question.
- A — Act Like Yourself: Lead from your true identity—not from pressure to perform or please. Remember who God says you are.
- R — Return to Joy: Train your neural pathways to recover quickly from negative emotions.
- E — Endure Hardship Well: Face challenges with courage and honesty, while staying grounded in joy.
“Perhaps the single biggest factor in producing sustainable motivation is the leader’s ability to
return to joy from a variety of negative emotions.” — Rare Leadership
📖 A Scriptural Reminder
Scripture confirms what brain science reveals: joy accelerates healthy connection and strengthens the bonds that matter most.
- “The joy of the Lord is your strength.” (Nehemiah 8:10)
Nehemiah spoke this to a weary people facing uncertainty. Their strength wasn’t in defenses or strategies—it was in God’s sustaining joy. For leaders, joy isn’t denial of hardship; it’s the energy to rebuild and lead with courage. When we’re pulled under by stress or relational tension, we’re tempted to isolate or blow-up important relationships. Nehemiah knew his community needed unity and shared strength. - “Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer.” (Romans 12:12)
Paul knew storms would come. Joy in hope ignites us in difficulty. Patience in affliction keeps us moving forward. Faithfulness in prayer re-centers us in God’s presence. Leaders who practice this embody steady, life-giving energy for their teams and families. ⚡️
🤝 An Invitation
Fear and insecurity create dysfunction—in boardrooms, in homes, and in hearts. Joy, on the other hand, accelerates our path toward peace and relational health. Leaders who learn to return to joy in their key relationships will see their businesses, marriages, and families regain momentum and health.
If you or your team are weary from relational tensions growing from unhealthy patterns and need a joy injection, I’d love to walk alongside you. Together we can cultivate leadership that becomes a healing force in a culture of conflict and polarization. 🌤️

