You’ve probably heard the line:
“The only one who likes change is a baby in a wet diaper.”
It’s funny—but it hides a deeper truth about human nature.
We don’t resist change because we’re stubborn.
We resist it because we’re wired to survive.
The Biology of Resistance
From a neuroscience perspective, resistance to change is expected.
Research by Joseph LeDoux and Daniel Kahneman shows that the brain:
• prefers predictability
• treats uncertainty as risk
• reacts quickly to perceived threats
When change appears, the brain doesn’t say:
“Interesting opportunity.”
It says:
“Something is different—be careful.”
This activates:
• stress response
• risk avoidance
• defensive thinking
In simple terms:
👉 Change feels like danger—even when it’s not.
Why Even Change Leaders Resist
This is the uncomfortable truth:
Even those who lead change feel resistance.
Change agents, executives, and transformation leaders all experience:
• hesitation
• doubt
• fear of failure
• fear of losing control
The difference is not absence of fear.
It’s how they respond to it.
The Pattern Across Every Transformation Era
History shows the same pattern—again and again.
📊 Every Transformation Follows Human Resistance
New Technology → Fear → Resistance → Adoption → Normalization
We saw this in:
• Industrial Revolution → fear of machines
• Internet era → fear of digital disruption
• Cloud adoption → security and control concerns
• AI today → fear of replacement, uncertainty
At every stage:
👉 humans resisted first
👉 adapted later
Why Change Feels Harder Today
In the past, change happened over decades.
Today:
• it happens continuously
• it happens faster
• it happens simultaneously across domains
This creates:
👉 constant cognitive pressure
The brain, designed for stability, is now operating in permanent change mode.
The Real Insight: People Don’t Resist Change — They Resist Loss
Research in behavioral economics (loss aversion) shows:
People fear losing something more than they value gaining something new.
So when change happens, people ask:
• What will I lose?
• What will change for me?
• Will I still succeed?
This explains resistance across:
• organizational transformation
• AI adoption
• leadership decisions
Coaching Insight: Fear Is Not the Enemy
In executive coaching, one of the most important reframes is:
Fear is not a weakness. It’s a signal.
It tells you:
• something important is changing
• uncertainty is present
• growth is possible
The goal is not to eliminate fear.
It’s to:
• recognize it
• understand it
• act despite it
What Separates Those Who Succeed
Across all transformations, one pattern stands out:
The ones who succeed are not the ones who feel no fear.
They are the ones who:
• accept uncertainty
• move before full clarity
• adapt continuously
• learn faster than change happens
The Leadership Shift
Leaders must shift from:
• avoiding change → embracing it
• controlling outcomes → navigating uncertainty
• seeking certainty → acting with incomplete information
Final Thought
Change is not occasional anymore.
It is constant.
Every day. Every hour.
And the real challenge is not the transformation itself.
It’s our natural instinct to resist it.
In the end:
Fear is human.
Resistance is natural.
Uncertainty is constant.
But those who move forward anyway—
👉 are the ones who grow, lead, and succeed.
