Behind The X's & O's of Business — Red Flags
What If You're The Red Flag?
Posted by Ruben Escalona on
One of the hardest parts of growth is realizing that not every problem exists outside of us. It's easy to identify red flags in customers, employees, partners, and organizations. It's much harder to recognize the patterns that might be showing up in our own leadership, communication, habits, and behavior.
Healthy Communication Feels Boring at First
Posted by Ruben Escalona on
One thing I’ve realized is that healthy communication can actually feel uncomfortable to people who spent too long adapting to chaos, emotional urgency, unclear expectations, or reactive environments. Sometimes stability feels “boring” simply because dysfunction trained us to mistake intensity for connection and urgency for importance.
Not Every Problem Needs an Immediate Emotional Reaction
Posted by Ruben Escalona on
One thing I’ve been learning is that emotional urgency can distort discernment faster than people realize. In business, leadership, and relationships, not every difficult conversation, mistake, or conflict requires an immediate emotional response. Sometimes maturity looks like slowing down long enough to think clearly before reacting emotionally.
Sometimes We Ignore Red Flags Because They Feel Familiar
Posted by Ruben Escalona on
Not every red flag gets ignored because we’re careless. Sometimes we ignore warning signs because they feel familiar to us. Familiar communication patterns. Familiar chaos. Familiar emotional dynamics. And one of the hardest parts of growth is realizing that familiarity and health are not always the same thing.
Sometimes We Ignore Red Flags Because We Want the Outcome Too Badly
Posted by Ruben Escalona on
One of the hardest parts of leadership and decision-making is staying honest when emotion becomes attached to the outcome. Sometimes we don’t miss red flags because they were hidden. Sometimes we ignore them because hope, pressure, ambition, loyalty, or desperation convinced us to keep moving anyway.