What No One Tells Women About Power, Intuition, and Leadership
How trusting your instincts transforms women's leadership from performance to presence
For a long time, women have been taught that power in leadership comes from refinement—being more polished, more agreeable, more palatable. We’re encouraged to sharpen our credentials, master the language of authority, and follow a narrow blueprint of what “professional” is supposed to look like.
What no one tells us is that real power doesn’t come from becoming someone else.
It comes from trusting what we already know.
Many high-performing women sense this early in their careers. They read the room before a word is spoken. They feel when timing is off, when a deal isn’t aligned, when a decision carries consequences that can’t yet be articulated. And yet, in professional environments that prioritize logic over perception, those instincts are often dismissed—sometimes by others, but more often by ourselves.
So we override them.
We call it being rational.
We call it being strategic.
We call it being “realistic.”
But the cost of that override isn’t failure—it’s disconnection. Disconnection from our clarity, our confidence, and ultimately, our leadership presence.
Here’s the truth that rarely gets said out loud: intuition is not the opposite of intelligence. It is intelligence—refined through experience, pattern recognition, and deep awareness. The most effective leaders I’ve worked with rely on it daily. They just don’t label it as intuition. They call it experience. They call it insight. They call it a gut feeling they’ve learned to respect.
When women are allowed to integrate intuition into leadership, something powerful happens. Decision-making becomes cleaner. Communication becomes more precise. Boundaries become clearer. Leadership stops feeling performative and starts feeling embodied.
This integration isn’t about abandoning logic or structure. It’s about recognizing that strategy without self-trust eventually collapses under pressure. Intuition, when grounded, doesn’t make leadership softer—it makes it sharper.
I’ve watched women step fully into their authority not by pushing harder, but by listening more closely—to themselves. They stop explaining what they know before they know it. They stop shrinking insights that don’t yet have consensus approval. And in doing so, they lead with a quiet certainty that doesn’t need validation.
The most powerful leaders I know didn’t become louder to be heard or tougher to be respected. They didn’t chase permission or contort themselves to fit outdated leadership models.
They simply stopped abandoning themselves.
And in that choice, they didn’t just find their voice—they found their power.