This week, we talk about forgiveness—especially the hard, practical work of forgiving ourselves after a miss. I share a story about “Jennifer,” a senior leader who owned a decision publicly but kept replaying it privately, and how that quiet self-blame began to drain confidence, slow decisions, and dim her team’s energy. We unpack why self-forgiveness isn’t a soft pass; it’s accountable, repeatable, and central to psychological safety. You’ll learn a compact five-step “Repair Loop” leaders can use in real time: name the miss, own responsibility, repair what you can, recommit to a guiding principle, and then release and return. We also close with two reflection questions to help you move from self-attack to self-respect—so you can lead with clarity, presence, and humanity.
What you’ll learn:
Why self-forgiveness is accountability, not avoidance
How unseen self-blame erodes confidence and psychological safety
A five-step Repair Loop you can use on any Tuesday afternoon
The ripple effects of forgiving leadership on trust, morale, and innovation
Two journal prompts to turn insight into action
In this deeply resonant episode of Office Therapy, Dr. Brad Shuck unpacks a growing, unspoken truth: many leaders aren’t burnt out from lack of care—but from carrying too much, too often, alone. Drawing from lived experience and decades of research on engagement and leadership, Brad explores the shift from heroic compassion to sustainable systems of care. You’ll meet Maya, a leader whose story mirrors so many, and walk away with a practical playbook to redistribute emotional load, build safety into rituals, and protect the people who make workplaces work. This episode is an invitation—to pause, to reflect, and to design something better.
What happens when leaders stop treating pay as a cost and start treating it as an invitation to ownership? Inspired by recent headlines about Walmart’s shift toward equity-based compensation, Brad explores why the real story isn’t the number—it’s the philosophy. Through research, reflection, and a powerful story about a frontline leader named Maria, this episode unpacks how trust, agency, and shared investment change the way people show up at work. Listeners will walk away with five practical ways to foster ownership on any team—no matter the budget—and a reflective question to carry into the week.
When the culture’s pulse fades, meetings look fine on paper but feel lifeless in the room. In this episode, Dr. Brad Shuck names the quiet signs of a flatlined workplace—polite agreement, safe ideas, and no real spark—and explains why this isn’t a strategy problem, it’s a connection problem. Drawing on leadership research and real-world observation, he explores how curiosity, psychological safety, and human-centered leadership restore energy, and why nostalgia for “the way we worked” won’t bring it back. You’ll learn how to read the room, notice where energy rises and falls, and use one brave question—“How are you, and what do we need to talk about?”—to bring people back into conversation and care.
Welcome to Office Therapy with Dr. Brad Shuck — a space to slow down, reflect, and reconnect with what matters most at work and in life.
In this episode, Brad explores what it really means to lead with hope in a time when so many are feeling the weight of uncertainty and exhaustion. Drawing on the research of psychologist C.R. Snyder and insights from Harvard Business Review, he unpacks the structure of hope — goals, pathways, and agency — and how each plays a role in building resilience, trust, and meaning in the workplace.
Hope, Brad reminds us, isn’t naïve optimism. It’s courage in motion — the quiet belief that our efforts today can make tomorrow a little better. Through reflection and practical examples, he shows how small acts of recognition, gratitude, and purpose can turn a ripple of hope into a wave of renewal across teams and organizations.
Because when leaders choose hope, they don’t just inspire — they create the conditions for people to thrive.
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Pull up a chair. Pour a bourbon or grab a coffee — whatever helps you slow down. In this first episode of Office Therapy, Dr. Brad Shuck invites you to pause the chaos and take a look at what’s really going on behind the office door — leadership, engagement, trust, burnout, belonging, and the human side of work.
After decades studying why some people thrive while others struggle, Brad shares why work doesn’t have to be toxic, leadership doesn’t have to be lonely, and culture doesn’t have to be complicated. It just has to start with a conversation.