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Quiet Leadership: Why the Quietest Person in the Room Is Often the Most Dangerous Thinker
Quiet thinkers naturally gravitate toward deep work — long stretches of focused, undistracted thinking.
Rajesh Seshadri
5 days ago4 min read


The Man Who Stopped Mid-Sentence
The boardroom was loud.
Charts. Opinions. Interruptions.
Mid-sentence, he stopped speaking.
He closed his notebook.
And sat down.
No announcement.
No apology.
Silence followed.
Everyone looked at him, confused.
Some uncomfortable.
Some irritated.
No one knew it then,
but this would become the most important moment of his leadership.
Rajesh Seshadri
Jan 204 min read


Job Title Identity: The Day I Realised My Designation Was Lying to Me
If my job title disappeared tomorrow, would I disappear with it?
Most of us don’t ask this question. Not because it’s irrelevant — but because it’s dangerous. It destabilizes carefully constructed identities. It threatens the scaffolding on which our self-worth quietly rests.
So we stay busy. We stay important. We stay titled.
Rajesh Seshadri
Jan 204 min read
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