Positive mindset and resilience are not the problem
This is the part that gets lost easily: I believe in both. Genuinely.
A person who remains capable of action in difficult moments, who does not define setbacks as failure, who takes their own development seriously, that person is stronger, more effective, and more sustainable over time than someone who does not. This is not wishful thinking. It is supported by evidence. And organisations where people can work with psychological safety, where mistakes can be named without consequence, where leadership builds trust rather than spending it, those organisations function better. Research supports this. Practice confirms it.
The difference lies in the conditions, and in the people who shape them. Positive mindset and resilience produce results where real structures exist, where leadership takes responsibility, where pressure is treated as a signal rather than a fixed state. Without that foundation, they are not development tools. They are expectations pointed in the wrong direction. What I took from my own experience is not scepticism toward these concepts. It is the ability to distinguish: is something being offered to me here, or is something being demanded of me?
That ability, if I am honest, may be the most effective form of resilience I know.
