『Psychological Safety: The "Safe" Language That Undercuts Psychological Safety』のカバーアート

Psychological Safety: The "Safe" Language That Undercuts Psychological Safety

Psychological Safety: The "Safe" Language That Undercuts Psychological Safety

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Episode Overview In this episode of Leadership Limbo, Josh Hugo and John Clark continue their conversation on psychological safety by moving from theory into the subtle language and behaviors that shape team culture every day. Building on the prior episode, the discussion explores how leaders unintentionally avoid tension, soften conflict, and emotionally accommodate others in ways that ultimately weaken trust, accountability, and growth. The episode begins by revisiting a core idea from the previous conversation: psychological safety is not the same thing as comfort. Real psychological safety involves the ability to take interpersonal risks—sharing disagreement, offering difficult feedback, asking questions, and speaking honestly without fear of punishment. But in many organizations, the language of safety has quietly shifted toward preserving comfort and minimizing discomfort. Josh and John explore how this dynamic shows up in common workplace phrases that often sound healthy on the surface. Statements like “let’s take this offline,” “I’m not comfortable with your representation of the actual facts,” or “let’s create a working group” can sometimes reflect thoughtful leadership. But they can also become mechanisms for avoiding direct tension, delaying disagreement, or outsourcing difficult conversations. A major theme of the episode is emotional accommodation—the tendency to prioritize emotional comfort over honest engagement. Leaders may rescue others from discomfort, soften necessary feedback, or suppress disagreement in order to preserve harmony. While these behaviors are often well-intentioned, they can unintentionally create cultures where people avoid risk, withhold truth, or rely on leaders to manage tension for them. The conversation also dives into anonymous feedback and surveys, questioning whether they truly build psychological safety or simply compensate for leadership cultures where direct feedback does not feel possible. Josh and John argue that healthy organizations ultimately create conditions where people can speak in their own voice, rather than relying on anonymity to protect themselves. The episode closes with a deeper reflection on leadership rescue dynamics. When leaders speak on behalf of others rather than helping people speak for themselves, they may unintentionally reduce ownership and reinforce dependency. Instead, strong leadership creates the conditions where people can name their own experience, engage in disagreement directly, and develop the confidence to take interpersonal risks themselves. Ultimately, the conversation reframes psychological safety not as the elimination of tension, but as the ability to remain engaged within it. Timestamped Chapters 00:00 – Introduction and Returning to Psychological Safety 02:11 – Revisiting Risk, Comfort, and Emotional Accommodation 05:48 – Why Engagement Remains Low Despite Psychological Safety Trends 09:20 – Emotional Accommodation and Leadership Validation 13:44 – “Let’s Take This Offline” and Avoiding Tension 19:56 – Facts, Truth, and Competing Perspectives 25:21 – Working Groups and Outsourcing Conflict 28:57 – Anonymous Surveys and Feedback Culture 34:03 – Speaking for Others vs. Helping Them Speak 36:43 – Final Reflections and Taking Interpersonal Risks Key Takeaways Psychological safety is about enabling interpersonal risk, not protecting comfort. Leaders often emotionally accommodate others in ways that reduce honesty and accountability. Avoiding tension does not create trust; engaging it productively does. Common workplace phrases can unintentionally suppress disagreement and delay growth. Anonymous feedback systems may reveal deeper leadership and culture problems. Strong leaders create conditions where people speak for themselves rather than being rescued. Growth-oriented cultures normalize respectful disagreement and direct feedback. Real psychological safety requires both courage and responsibility. Listener Homework Pay attention this week to the language you use when tension or disagreement appears. Notice when you instinctively move conflict offline, soften feedback, outsource decisions, or rescue others from discomfort. Ask yourself: am I responding from principle, or reacting to relieve tension? Choose one conversation this week where you can remain present in the discomfort instead of immediately trying to resolve it. Practice creating space for direct engagement rather than emotional accommodation. Resources Referenced Josh's Article on Psychological Safety on SubstackAmy Edmondson’s book, "The Fearless Organization" on psychological safetyGoogle’s Project Aristotle research
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