I recently heard a quote, and it stayed with me – “A wise man submits to the circumstances. However, if he always submits to circumstances, he can only stay a wise man. He’ll never be an outstanding man.”
On reflection, this quote holds more than insight, but a challenge. A challenge to anyone who’s ever prided themselves on being smart, measured, emotionally intelligent… but who may be mistaking wisdom for progress.
Yes, wisdom teaches us to bend. But greatness? Greatness requires knowing when to break the mould.
Let’s unpack why knowing when to adapt and when to defy might be the most important leadership lesson of all.

The Two Paths: Adapt or Transcend
Every one of us is constantly met with choices. Especially when circumstances are hard, uncertain, or outside our control.
You can either submit and adapt (wisdom), or challenge and transcend (greatness).
Wisdom is vital. It teaches you to choose your battles, to conserve your energy, to stay grounded when life is chaotic. However,
- Wisdom without courage becomes passivity.
- Adaptation without vision becomes stagnation.
- And a life that’s always responding will never lead.
If you only ever adjust to your environment, you become shaped by it, rather than shaping it yourself.

When Adaptation is the Smartest Move
There’s strength in knowing when not to fight.
- In mindset: Like Stoics, wise people accept what they can’t change and focus on what they can.
- In leadership: The best leaders know when to pause, to listen, to pivot.
- In life: Sometimes, adjusting after failure, rejection, or disappointment is what helps us rise again.
This is the kind of resilience that bends, but doesn’t break. But that’s only part of the story.
The Trap of “Always Being Wise”
Many people become so good at adapting that they forget how to challenge. They confuse survival with success. They stay in jobs that don’t fulfil them, maintain relationships that don’t grow them, or follow routines that quietly drain their joy.
Comfortable wisdom becomes a cage.
- A fixed mindset adapts to stay afloat; a growth mindset dares to swim upstream.
- Managers maintain systems; visionary leaders rewrite the rules.
- If you’re always adjusting, you’ll never disrupt anything worth changing.
Adaptation gets you in the game. But defiance? That’s how you change the game.

Greatness Demands Disruption – Avoiding The Comfortable Trap of “Being Measured”
Outstanding individuals don’t just manage reality, they reshape it. Steve Jobs did not simply follow trends; he established them. Nelson Mandela didn’t just endure injustice; he transformed a nation. You don’t have to accept a path that doesn’t reflect your potential.
In high-demand roles, many of us pride ourselves on being calm, composed, and reasonable. That’s admirable. But it can also become an excuse:
- “Now isn’t the right time.”
- “I don’t want to upset the system.”
- “Let me just wait it out a bit longer.”
This is how bold dreams die slowly, not in fire, but in comfort.
Greatness means asking: “What rules am I blindly following?” “What fears am I mistaking for wisdom?” “Where am I waiting for permission, I don’t need?”
Great leaders reshape the system through questioning assumptions; disrupting old patterns, living and leading from alignment, not fear.
Great leaders know when to bend, and when to stand tall.

The Balance: Flow Like Water, Stand Like a Mountain
True leadership, and intentional living, isn’t about choosing between wisdom and boldness. It’s about knowing when to be each. Living with intention means asking yourself:
- Am I choosing my life or just adapting to it?
- Are my values driving my actions or is fear?
- Am I playing to avoid loss or to create meaning?
Sometimes you adapt. Sometimes you defy. The art is in choosing consciously, not automatically.
Sometimes the wisest move is reflection. Other times, it’s risk. The key is knowing the difference, and choosing boldly when the moment demands it.
Because a wise person survives. But an outstanding person leads.

Shifting From Wise to Outstanding
So, here are my questions to you:
- Are you just adjusting, or are you creating?
- Are you “wisely” holding back or is it time to be bold?
- What’s one area in your life where you’ve adapted for too long?
- What might shift if you brought boldness to that space?
- What would your future look like if you led, instead of adjusted?
This week, challenge one circumstance you’ve quietly accepted. Say the thing. Start the thing. Change the thing.
Because wisdom will keep you grounded. But courage will take you further than you imagined.
“Be not just wise. Be brave. Be loud. Be outstanding.”
Now go lead.
Thank you for being a VCC reader.