Anna Scheller
page for information about professional sales training and business consulting. Investing in people. Leading with integrity. Building what lasts.
Check out my TV shows on https://channelstore.roku.com/details/264623/raven-international-tv-network Website https://www.annascheller.com
The strongest people I know have one thing in common.
Not confidence.
Not talent.
Not experience.
They know how to lean on others.
Somewhere along the way, we started believing strength meant carrying everything ourselves.
I think real strength is knowing when to let someone help carry the load.
06/09/2026
Opposite to common beliefs, the older I get, the less impressed I am by self-sufficiency.
The people I admire most are not the ones carrying everything alone.
They are the ones who have built relationships strong enough to lean on when life gets hard.
A friend who checks in.
A family member who shows up.
A neighbor who helps without being asked.
A community that refuses to let someone struggle alone.
We celebrate stories of individual strength.
But in my experience, resilience is often built together.
Who has helped carry you through a difficult season?
What does intentional leadership actually look like in real life?
And I need to know…how many of these were you already aware of?
• Asking for help before you burn out
• Leaving margin in your schedule for people, not just productivity
• Protecting your family even when opportunity is knocking
• Staying kind when pressure would justify being harsh
• Choosing long-term trust over short-term optics
When we talk “leadership” so often we focus on how we show up for our teams, how we support them, whether we have an open door policy, etc, etc.
We don’t realize how much of the margins bleed through from our personal lives and values to make us the leaders we are…
Or aren’t.
If you’ve got some to add, I’d love to hear them! What are the little things that make a difference for leaders?
06/01/2026
Do you know what the 3 biggest things no one talks about when it comes to leadership?
1. Your support network.
The people checking on you, praying for you, helping with your family, or carrying pieces of life with you affect your leadership more than most business strategies ever will.
2. Your ability to stay steady when nobody is applauding.
A lot of leadership is quiet. Repetitive. Unseen. The people who build lasting things are usually the people who kept showing up before anyone noticed.
3. The condition of your relationships at home.
You can build something impressive publicly while everything meaningful quietly falls apart behind the scenes.
The older I get, the more I believe leadership is less about image and more about what is holding you together underneath it all.
Did you know that it doesn’t matter how strong you are…
…Even the strongest among us, sometimes need support.
Independence will not replace the strength that comes from being surrounded by people who care, show up, and carry part of the weight with you.
That is true in leadership. In family. In life.
We become stronger when we stop trying to do everything alone.
05/26/2026
I’ve relearned a lesson that I thought I knew over the past six weeks.
I have always believed relationships matter. But some seasons of life deepen that belief in ways words cannot fully explain.
The past few months, we have been dealing with a family situation that has reminded me that strength is not found in carrying everything alone. It is found in the people who step in, pray for you, show up for you, support your family, and quietly help hold life together when things feel heavy.
I do not think we were ever meant to navigate difficult seasons by ourselves.
Community is not weakness. Dependence is not failure.
Sometimes the strongest thing we can do is allow ourselves to be supported.
If someone has helped carry you through a hard season, I hope you tell them how much it mattered.
The world celebrates quick results. But try not to fall into that trap. From my experience, the strongest things in life are usually built slowly. Even when my progress feels invisible, and the outcome feels far away.
In those moments, I remind myself that roots grow deep before anything blooms above the surface. That is true in leadership, relationships, family, and the kind of legacy that actually lasts.
Sometimes, the best show of strength is just continuing, despite everything.
05/18/2026
The most meaningful things in life are usually built more slowly than we expected: Strong relationships. Trust. Character. Legacy. None of them happen overnight.
There have been moments where I wondered if the steady, quiet work was making any difference at all. But over time, I have learned that growth is often happening long before we can see it. Not everything valuable blooms quickly.
And sometimes? Sometimes, the greatest act of leadership is simply refusing to give up on what matters most.
Resilience is very, very misunderstood.
There’s this weird belief out there that it’s about pushing harder. That couldn’t be more wrong. The truth is, it is about knowing what to hold onto when everything feels uncertain so we can come back again and again as needed.
In difficult seasons, I have learned to come back to the same things.
The people who walk with me. The purpose that grounds me. The values that do not change. That is what gives you the strength to keep moving forward, even when the path is not clear.
05/12/2026
You do not build resilience by avoiding hard seasons; that’s just the truth of it all.
Some of the strongest parts of my life were formed in moments I would not have chosen. The people around me and the purpose I refused to let go of carried me through. Not control or certainty (like so many people insist it does)
Bottom line? When your why is strong, it does not remove difficulty, but it gives you something steady to hold onto inside of it.
That is what allows you to keep showing up with strength, even when things feel uncertain.
What has helped you stay steady in a hard season?
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