Tag: ComfortZone


  • 57.0 — Familiarity

    When Comfort Disguises Itself as Competence. Familiarity matters because stagnation is far removed from lack of ability, and especially because familiarity often feels like mastery while quietly preventing growth. In coaching conversations, familiarity is rarely questioned. It sounds like experience, realism, or common sense. Yet familiarity often anchors people to what is known — even when…

  • 34.0 Comfort Zone

    Why Growth Lives Between Safety and Panic. The Comfort Zone model endures because it is far removed from the generic, and especially because it describes how humans actually experience change — emotionally, cognitively, and physically. Rather than framing growth as motivation or willpower, this model maps internal states that arise the moment a goal is imagined. Coaching…