From the Trail
Reflections on Leadership, Faith, and Purpose with Scott Mitchell
Most Recent Reflections
For years, I assumed competence was simply part of the landscape. It helped me solve problems, guide organizations, and contribute meaningful value. What I didn't realize was how much reassurance it was quietly providing. When I stepped into a new season of writing, the confidence that came from decades of experience disappeared—and a deeper question surfaced. This reflection explores what happens when competence is no longer carrying what we thought it was.
A slower-than-expected season forced me to confront something many leaders eventually face: the temptation to interrupt transition before God finishes the work the tension came to do. Reflections on leadership, stillness, identity, and learning not to rush the shift.
Mud season on the trail is messy, slow, and sometimes frustrating. Leadership seasons can feel the same. When direction becomes clear, the real work of organizational alignment often begins — and that work rarely happens on clean ground.
Quiet seasons in leadership often feel unproductive. But what if God is building something in you before He builds something through you?
This is a reflection on the work that happens after preparation and before clarity — when faithfulness matters more than visibility and the season requires restraint, patience, and trust.
Most Recent Insights
One of the patterns I've noticed in both my own leadership journey and in the organizations I've served is how easily perspective narrows under stress.
When a significant challenge emerges, whether organizational or personal, it is easy to begin viewing the situation as though it were entirely unique. Problems feel larger. Risks feel greater. Possible solutions become harder to see.
One practice that has consistently helped both me and the leaders I serve is what I would simply call a disciplined memory.
Many leadership transitions look like skill problems on the surface. Often they expose something deeper. In this reflection, Scott explores how stepping into unfamiliar territory revealed the hidden role competence had been playing—and why leaders who navigate change well learn to ground their identity somewhere more stable than their abilities.
Sometimes the strongest emotional reactions reveal deeper fears, insecurities, or instability underneath them. This reflection explores grounded identity, leadership discernment, and learning to pay attention to what is happening beneath frustration, uncertainty, and responsibility.
As long as I was useful, I felt more secure relationally. This reflection explores how leadership, responsibility, and long-term usefulness can quietly become tied to reassurance, belonging, and identity.
Somewhere along the way, usefulness stopped being merely something I offered and quietly became something I relied on. This reflective newsletter explores leadership identity, reassurance, transition, and what slowing down can expose beneath decades of responsibility.
All Reflections & Weekly Insights
Made for More: Answering God’s Call to Reset, Refocus, and Rise
There are moments when God presses pause and whispers, “You were made for more.” In this post, Scott and Christine share reflections on life, leadership, and the classroom—and invite you to Reset, Refocus, and Rise in this season.
