The Bhagavad Gita introduces a concept that quietly reframes what leadership confidence actually is: *nishkama karma*, action without attachment to outcome. When Arjuna freezes before battle — not from cowardice, but from paralysis over consequences — Krishna's counsel isn't 'believe harder.' It's to decouple your sense of self from the result entirely. The leader who needs a win to feel capable is always one loss away from collapse. The leader who acts from clarity of role and values, indifferent to the scoreboard, is paradoxically the steadiest person in the room.
Is there a decision you've been delaying not because you lack information, but because you're too invested in a particular outcome to act freely?
Drawing from Indian Philosophy / Vedanta — Vyasa (Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 3)
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