When we work with managers, teams, or organizations, a specific belief comes up again and again, often implicitly:
“If I achieve results, then I will be better off.”
It’s a linear, almost intuitive logic. And it’s also one of the biggest pitfalls I see every day in my work.
As children, we often learn fundamental dynamics without even realizing it.
Imagine this scene: two kids are playing on a bunk bed.
One falls. Pain, fear, impending tears.
And then something unexpected happens:
The other child completely changes the meaning of what happened.
“You didn’t fall… you landed like a unicorn.”
At that moment, reality hasn’t change.
The interpretation of reality has.
And the result is surprising: tears turn into a smile, fear turns back into play, pain becomes a manageable experience.
In my work as an organizational psychologist and coach, this is a core principle:
It is not what happens that determines how we are and act, but how our mental system interprets it.
This applies to:
- negative feedback
- a missed target
- an organizational change
- work pressure
Two people, same situation → completely different results.
Many organizations (and many professionals) still operate on this equation:
More results → more satisfaction → more motivation
But experience and research tell us a different story.
Here is why this happen:
- As soon as you reach a goal, you immediately set a new one.
- The feeling of satisfaction is fleeting
- The brain adapts and constantly moves the finish line
Result?
- Happiness is perpetually postponed
- Motivation becomes fragile
- Stress increases
In recent years, driven by developments in positive psychology, a different model has emerged:
It is not success that generates well-being.
It is well-being that drives success.
When a person works in a positive mental state:
- cognitive abilities expand
- creativity flourishes
- decision-making quality improves
- resilience grows
And this has a direct impact on:
- performance
- relations
- leadership
When I introduce this framework in a company, people are often skeptical at first:
“Okay, interesting… but let’s be realistic, that won’t work here”
Then they start experimenting.
And they see that they:
- manage stress better
- communicate more effectively
- make more lucid decisions
- recover their energy
Not because the context has changed.
But because their internal mindset changed.
The good news is that this isn’t just theory; it is a highly trainable skill:
Here are a few micro-interventions I use in my training programs:
- focus on 3 real positive elements every day
- re-read recent experiences in learnin-context
- train attention and presence pauses
- develop intentional acts of recognition (towards oneself and others)
These are simple tools, but they become extremely powerful over time.
One of the key takeaways I always emphasize in coaching and training is this:
We can’t control everything that happens tu us.
But we can train the way we interpret and go through it.
And it is on this level that a decisive game is played:
- for leadership
- for well-being
- for the quality of the results

