This episode explores the uncomfortable truth that you cannot change someone who is committed to not seeing reality. When a person is ‘pretending to be asleep’, it is not ignorance, it is protection. Whether in relationships, teams, leadership environments, or personal development spaces, people often stay loyal to their identity, their story, or their avoidance patterns long after they have been shown a better way. The challenge is not lack of information, but lack of willingness to confront discomfort.
This conversation cuts through the common trap of over-responsibility, where high performers, leaders, and coaches believe that if they just explain it better, care more, or push harder, they can wake someone up. In reality, people only change when the cost of staying the same becomes greater than the comfort of avoidance. Until that threshold is crossed, your effort is often wasted energy.
Within relationships and organisational dynamics, this shows up as repeating patterns: denial of accountability, resistance to feedback, and emotional deflection. The work is not to force awareness, but to decide what you will no longer participate in. Boundaries become the mechanism of clarity.
Practically, this episode challenges you to step back from rescuing, fixing, or convincing. Instead, focus on modelling truth, holding standards, and allowing others to experience the consequences of their choices. This is not detachment from care, but clarity without attachment to outcome.
Ultimately, leadership and personal growth require acceptance of a hard truth: awareness cannot be imposed. It can only be offered. The rest is up to the individual.
Your job is not to carry responsibility for other people’s readiness. It is to stay aligned with truth, act with discipline, and protect your energy. When you stop trying to wake the pretending, you reclaim focus, power, and effectiveness in your own life and direction back.
The post EP 3707 You can’t wake a person who’s pretending to be asleep appeared first on The Strong Life Project.