There’s a short quote often shared in leadership circles:
“It’s impossible,” said pride.
“It’s risky,” said experience.
“It’s pointless,” said reason.
“Give it a try,” said the heart.
While its exact origin is unclear, the message reflects a well-studied tension in psychology and decision-making:
the conflict between logic, past experience, ego — and intuition.
The Four Voices Behind Every Decision
Every leader recognizes these voices — even if they don’t name them.
Pride says:
Don’t fail. Don’t look weak. Protect your reputation.
Experience says:
You’ve seen this before. It didn’t work. Don’t repeat mistakes.
Reason says:
The data doesn’t support this. The odds are low. The ROI is unclear.
And then there’s the heart — or what research often calls intuition.
It says:
There’s something here. Try anyway.
What Research Actually Says
Modern research doesn’t dismiss intuition.
In fact, studies on decision-making by Daniel Kahneman show that humans operate with two systems:
• System 1 — fast, intuitive, pattern-based thinking
• System 2 — slow, analytical, logical reasoning
Both are necessary.
Similarly, work by Gary Klein shows that experienced professionals often make high-quality decisions using recognition-primed intuition — especially in uncertain environments.
So the “heart” is not irrational.
It is often compressed experience + pattern recognition + instinct.
The Leadership Trap
In organizations, three voices tend to dominate:
• pride (protecting image)
• experience (protecting from past mistakes)
• reason (protecting through analysis)
All three are valuable.
But together, they can create paralysis.
Leaders become:
• overly cautious
• slow to act
• resistant to new ideas
• dependent on perfect data
And in fast-changing environments — especially with AI — waiting for certainty is often the biggest risk.
The Role of the “Heart” in Leadership
The “heart” is not about ignoring logic.
It’s about acting when logic is incomplete.
In innovation, transformation, and leadership:
• data is often delayed
• patterns are still forming
• outcomes are uncertain
This is where leaders must:
• take calculated risks
• test small before scaling
• move before full certainty exists
Coaching Insight: Balancing the Voices
In executive coaching, one of the most powerful shifts is helping leaders balance these internal voices.
Not eliminate them — but integrate them.
The goal is not:
• pure intuition
• pure analysis
It is informed courage.
Leaders who succeed:
• respect experience — but don’t become trapped by it
• use data — but don’t wait for perfection
• manage ego — but don’t let it block action
• listen to intuition — but validate through action
Final Thought
Most opportunities don’t come with certainty.
They come with tension.
Pride will resist.
Experience will warn.
Reason will question.
And sometimes, progress only happens when something inside says:
“Try anyway.”
