The Liz Show: Executive Psychology & Performance Under Pressure
Welcome to The Liz Show: Executive Psychology & Performance Under Pressure.
Hosted by Elizabeth Louis, an executive psychology advisor specializing in identity architecture, thinking traps, and performance under pressure, this podcast explores how high-performing individuals think, decide, and operate when the stakes are real.
Episodes break down the psychological patterns that shape decision-making, confidence, composure, and leadership capacity. Topics range from cognitive distortions and identity structure to behavioral economics, high-performance psychology, and the internal constraints that limit expansion.
Elizabeth also integrates biblical wisdom throughout many conversations, reflecting her own Christian worldview and the role faith can play in shaping identity, responsibility, and resilience.
Some episodes focus deeply on psychological frameworks and performance science, while others explore the intersection of psychology, faith, and personal responsibility.
If you're interested in understanding how internal architecture affects performance in business, leadership, and life, The Liz Show examines the patterns underneath how people think, act, and grow under pressure.
The Liz Show: Executive Psychology & Performance Under Pressure
People-Pleasing Leaders Cut Off Their Own Authenticity | Root Psychology of a Codependent Leader
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Most executives think their biggest leadership risk is making the wrong decision.
I'm going to show you something more dangerous — and far more subtle.
When you adjust who you are depending on who's in the room, you think you're being adaptive. Emotionally intelligent. Strategic.
But underneath that adaptability is usually something else: people-pleasing, approval dependence, or what the Bible calls "fear of man."
And here's the part most leaders miss — this pattern didn't start in the boardroom. It started in your childhood. In family systems where your job was to read the room, regulate everyone's emotions, and keep things stable. Your nervous system learned to monitor, adjust, and appease to stay safe.
The problem? That conditioning keeps running long after the original environment is gone.
In this episode, I walk you through:
- Why chameleon leadership undermines your authority (even when it looks like emotional intelligence)
- How codependency conditioning from childhood shows up in your executive presence
- Why this pattern makes you easy to manipulate — and how skilled operators can take advantage of you faster than you realize
- The root fear driving this behavior (and the shame underneath it)
- The real cost: reduced clarity, constant exhaustion, weakened authority, and decisions filtered through others' reactions instead of your own conviction
- How to build stable identity so you show up as the same person in every room
- A diagnostic question to spot when you're editing yourself out of fear
If you've ever stayed quiet in a meeting because you were managing how someone might react — not because the idea needed more thought — this one's for you.
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