Leading So Others Thrive: The Long View of Leadership
Episode 50 of Elevate Your Call to Service explores the long view of law enforcement leadership—how everyday choices, consistency, and people-first leadership shape lasting impact at work, at home, and in the community.
4 Communication Mistakes That Cripple Law Enforcement Leadership
Discover 4 communication mistakes that undermine law enforcement leadership—and how clarity, direction, and humility strengthen trust and team performance.
Wellness and Resilience in Law Enforcement: How Officers Learn to Withstand, Recover, and Grow
Wellness and resilience are essential for leaders navigating high-stress environments. In this episode, we explore how leaders can withstand pressure, recover from setbacks, and grow stronger through intentional wellness practices, mindset shifts, and purpose-driven leadership. Designed for leaders who want sustainable strength, clarity, and long-term impact.
Service-Driven Leadership: How Humility Builds Stronger Teams
Service-driven leadership goes beyond rank and position. In this episode, Mike and Cathy unpack how humility, purpose, and people-first habits build trust, strengthen teams, and elevate leadership across law enforcement and public safety.
Beyond Tactics: How Faith Strengthens Law Enforcement Resilience
In this heartfelt episode of Elevate Your Call to Service, Mike and Cathy get personal after a family scare—a jolting call about a car accident that reminds them of how quickly life can change. From that moment of fear and gratitude, they pivot into a deeper conversation on spiritual wellness and faith as essential elements of resilience in law enforcement and first responder life.
Mike shares key takeaways from his recent FBI National Academy Comprehensive Wellness and Resilience certification, reinforcing his long-held belief that true wellness extends beyond the physical and mental, deeply encompassing the spiritual. Together, the hosts explore faith as a vital dimension of wellness, discussing practical ways officers and their families can begin to explore who God is, what faith offers, and how curiosity itself can be a first step toward peace.
Listeners will learn:
Why spiritual health supports resilience for leaders, officers, and their families
How to take ten quiet minutes to reflect on what’s truly guiding your life
Why asking “Who or what is big enough to carry what I’m carrying?” can change everything
Simple first steps to explore faith, including reading the Book of John, Psalms, or Proverbs
How even small spiritual habits can align your purpose, calm your spirit, and renew your motivation to serve
Cathy closes the episode with an encouraging challenge: pause, reflect, and take that first step toward spirituality. You might just find that faith is the next layer of strength and wellness you didn’t know you needed.
You’re Not Adapting—You’re Coasting on Old Wins: A Leadership Wake-Up Call
What do a shattered Tahoe window and leadership have in common? Both reveal when yesterday’s habits become today’s anchors—and what we have to unlearn.
Using a simple parking-lot mishap as a metaphor, Mike and Cathy explore:
Unlearning: When a once-useful habit becomes an anchor—and how to let it go.
Curiosity over certainty: Why considering “What am I missing?” builds safer, smarter teams.
Commander's intent: Keeping the mission and outcomes steady while the plan flexes.
Trust and junior voices: Creating space where new ideas aren’t heard as criticism.
You’ll leave with a crisp, field-ready framework—LACE:
Listen: Get the full picture and the ground truth.
Assess: Weigh risks, resources, legal factors, and community impact.
Collaborate: Blend veteran judgment with fresh eyes and subject-matter expertise.
Execute: Make the call, communicate the why, and set a quick review point.
If you’re tired of black-and-white thinking but don’t want chaos, this is your wake-up call. Adaptability isn’t trendy—it’s how leaders keep teams safer, decisions sharper, and outcomes better in a world that’s changing every day.
Time to lace it up.
7 Warning Signs You’re Leading in Isolation (And Your Agency Is Paying For It)
In this episode of Elevate Your Call to Service, we unpack how leadership isolation quietly takes hold in law enforcement—and how it starts to cost your team, your agency, and your family. Mike and Cathy distinguish healthy solitude from destructive isolation, explore why good leaders drift into it (time pressure, insecurity, ego, “I’ll just do it myself”), and share a candid story of listening, apologizing, and rebuilding trust with a hurting patrol team.
7 warning signs you’re leading in isolation:
1. Two‑way dialogue has slipped into one‑way updates—people hear after decisions are made.
2. Peer check‑ins are fading; the circle you used to consult has gone quiet.
3. Surprise decisions are blindsiding other units—or your family at home.
4. You’re more defensive toward questions or dissent; “my way or the highway” is creeping in.
5. You feel decision fatigue, cynicism, or spiritual/emotional dryness
6. You’re skipping debriefs at home; irritability and stress are carrying over into the evening.
7. In the name of efficiency, you’re choosing “I’ll handle it” over collaboration—and it’s becoming the norm.
Listener takeaways:
A clear line between solitude (restorative) and isolation (distorting)
Why comparison, insecurity, and pace push leaders toward “decision‑making in a vacuum”
How to course‑correct: own impact, listen fully, make changes, and keep your promise over time.
Beyond the Org Chart: How to Break Silos and Build Mission‑First, Trust‑Rich Teams in Law Enforcement
In this episode of Elevate Your Call to Service, we tackle a costly leadership problem in policing: quiet infighting among leaders that fractures collaboration, slows operations, and erodes public trust.
Drawing from real command‑staff experiences, they unpack how “my division” thinking, surprise decisions, and ego-driven identities turn internal partners into competitors—and what it takes to rebuild an agency‑first culture.
You’ll hear candid stories from the command table and the kitchen table—including a quick “course correction” after the FBI National Academy that illustrates how easily people drift from “we” to “me,” and how intentional resets bring teams back to mission.
Listener takeaways:
A simple checklist to name drift, put the mission in the room, and make trust visible
How to create a 30‑day shared win with a cross‑unit case captain
Language swaps that shift identity from unit‑first to agency‑first
How to recognize and interrupt “kingdom building” early—before it costs your community.