Limiting beliefs appear at every stage of coaching practice. What changes is not their presence, but how they are recognised, held, and engaged. Early coaching and masterly coaching do not differ in intention. They differ in judgement, pacing, and depth of perception. This post clarifies that progression from a wholeness perspective.
Limiting beliefs matter across all support disciplines, yet how belief is approached determines whether change stabilises or stalls. Generic coaching, other support disciplines, and wholeness-based coaching each engage belief differently. None are inherently wrong. Each operates from a distinct frame of purpose, boundary, and depth. This post clarifies those differences — not as hierarchy, but rather…
The Architecture of Constraint. Limiting beliefs matter because behaviour is far removed from capability alone, and especially because what people believe about themselves quietly defines what feels possible, permissible, and safe. In coaching, limiting beliefs are often treated as surface-level thoughts to reframe or replace. This approach misses their depth. Limiting beliefs are far removed from…
Every coaching journey begins somewhere — often not with confidence or clarity, but with questions, uncertainty, and an inner dialogue that quietly sets limits. In this feature conversation, a highly respected coach and educator shares a personal story that mirrors the experience of many who later find their way into coaching: a career built with…