What Makes a Healthy Leader?

3 Essential Traits to Prevent Burnout, Moral Failure, and a Giant Ego


Watch Ep 16

What actually makes someone a healthy leader?

You already know it’s not charisma, competence, or how many people you lead. Host John Lin is joined by Paul McMullen, LPC, and Shannon Pugh, Care and Mobilization Pastor at Irving Bible Church, to explore a question many leaders avoid, but eventually have to face: What’s happening inside of you as you lead?

As more leaders burn out, fall apart, or slowly lose themselves, this conversation gets underneath the surface of leadership—and into what actually sustains it over time. Through personal stories and practical insight, this episode unpacks what it takes to lead with emotional health, inner alignment, and long-term integrity. In this episode, we discuss:

  • The 3 core traits of healthy leaders: self-awareness, boundaries, and humility

  • The hidden systemic pressures that keep leaders stuck and silent

  • Why competence can mask unhealth—until it can’t

  • Practical ways to start doing the internal work before it’s too late

Whether you lead a church, a team, a business, or a family—if you influence people, this conversation is for you. Because we don’t just need more leaders. We desperately need healthier ones.


Dive Deeper

Check out these curated articles to explore concepts related to the show. Each article is grounded in biblical truth and evidence-based mental health tools.

“THE COST OF OVER-FUNCTIONING”

Caring for people reflects the heart of Christ. But sometimes, without realizing it, compassion slowly turns into over-functioning — constantly rescuing, fixing, carrying, and emotionally managing others in ways that eventually harm both you and the people you were entrusted to lead.


“HOW TO INCREASE SELF-AWARENESS & DECREASE HARM”

Self-awareness doesn't get the attention it deserves in conversations about leadership. We gravitate towards vision, communication, team-building, resilience. But the question "do you actually know what's driving you right now?" — that one is easy to skip over. And that's problematic. In our experience working with leaders across a variety of contexts, the thing that distinguishes a leader who finishes well and a leader who eventually fractures almost always comes down to this: One of them did the inner work, and one of them didn't.




Transcript