Book details

  • Genre:business & economics
  • Sub-genre:Leadership
  • Language:English
  • Pages:132
  • eBook ISBN:9798317832131
  • Paperback ISBN:9798317832124

Leading While Human

Notes I Wish Someone Had Given Me

By Ralph Kellogg

Overview


Leadership is often portrayed as confidence, certainty, and strength under pressure. But what happens in the moments no one prepares you for—when silence costs more than speaking, when responsibility feels heavy, when personal struggle collides with professional expectation, and when the role you hold begins to shape who you believe you are? This book is a collection of reflective leadership essays drawn from real experiences inside organizations, boardrooms, and moments of private reckoning. Through honest storytelling, the author explores the human realities behind leadership titles: fear, ambition, shame, grief, mental health, identity, power, and the quiet decisions that shape how leaders show up for others.
Read more

Description


Leadership is rarely what we imagine it will be. It is not defined by how polished we appear, but by how consciously we choose to show up. Most people enter leadership believing it will bring clarity, confidence, and authority—that experience will quiet doubt and success will resolve uncertainty. Instead, leadership often magnifies the very things we hoped it would erase: fear, pressure, responsibility, identity, and the constant awareness that our decisions affect others in profound ways. This book is not a manual on strategy, productivity, or performance metrics. It is an exploration of the human side of leadership—the parts rarely discussed in meetings, leadership programs, or executive coaching sessions. Through deeply honest essays drawn from real workplace experiences, the author examines how leadership is shaped not only by training and ambition, but by lived experience. Each story reflects a moment that changed how the author leads, listens, and shows up. Some are uncomfortable. Some are quiet. All are rooted in truth. The book explores what happens when leaders: • Carry responsibility without certainty • Navigate power dynamics that silence rather than support • Confuse being needed with being valued • Tie identity too closely to titles and roles • Struggle with anxiety, grief, and mental health while expected to remain composed • Learn that silence can cause more harm than speaking • Discover that inclusion is practiced in everyday moments, not policy statements • Realize that compassion and accountability must coexist Rather than offering prescriptive answers, this book invites reflection. It asks readers to consider how their experiences—both personal and professional—quietly influence how they make decisions, respond under stress, and relate to the people they lead. Readers learn how unresolved moments can become blind spots, how past wounds can shape reactions, and the impact leaders have through tone, language, presence, and restraint—often without realizing it. Written for current and emerging leaders or for anyone who works with others, this book offers a thoughtful examination of what "leadership" actually requires: not perfection, certainty, or control, but awareness, humility, and courage.
Read more

About The Author


Ralph Kellogg is a senior human resources executive, speaker, and advocate for mentally healthy workplaces. With more than two decades of experience leading people operations across complex organizations, his work centers on the intersection of leadership, culture, accountability, and compassion. Ralph is a TEDx speaker whose talk explores the cost of silence and the impact of unseen struggles in the workplace. He frequently delivers keynote presentations on human resources leadership, mental health at work, workplace inclusion, and building organizational cultures rooted in trust, clarity, and psychological safety. Ralph brings both professional expertise and lived experience to his work, advocating for environments where people are respected, supported, and able to show up authentically. His perspective is shaped by the belief that inclusion is not a separate initiative — it is foundational to effective leadership. Drawing from lived experience and professional practice, Ralph's writing examines the human side of leadership — the moments rarely discussed but deeply felt. He believes effective leadership is not defined by authority or certainty, but by awareness, humility, and the courage to show up well for others. He lives in Omaha, Nebraska with his husband and is committed to helping leaders create workplaces where people can succeed without sacrificing their wellbeing.
Read more

Book Reviews

to submit a book review