Dr. Greg Stewart: I³ for Leaders and the Power of Transforming Negative Emotions

 

Dr. Greg Stewart returns to the show to break down his new book, I³ for Leaders: Unleash the Rage of Negative Emotions Against the Obstacles of Becoming More — a bold framework that flips the script on how we think about anger, frustration, fear, and pressure.

Instead of pretending negative emotions don’t exist, Greg shows leaders how to harness them, understand them, and redirect them toward clarity, character, and growth.

In this conversation, we dig into the core of his I³ model:
Insight. Influence. Impact.
And how each one requires a brutally honest level of self-awareness most leaders never reach.

We cover:

Why ignoring or suppressing emotions makes leaders reactive, not strong

How to use anger and frustration as signals rather than explosions

What actually creates emotional maturity (and why so many leaders skip this work)

The surprising ways self-awareness and humility amplify your influence

How values, faith, and accountability shape your long-term leadership legacy

Greg also breaks down common leadership blindspots, why so many people “think” they’re self-aware when they’re not, and what it means to lead with both strength and emotional discipline.

If you want to grow as a leader — in your home, your business, or your community — this episode will give you a framework to understand yourself more deeply and lead others more effectively.

🎧 Watch, listen, and share.

Ready to JOIN THE FIGHT? Join Bryce’s email list for opportunities to join the discussion, get exclusive interviews, and MUCH MORE: Bryceeddy.com

For daily episodes, news, and conservative discussions like this, SUBSCRIBE to The Bryce Eddy Show:https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-bryce-eddy-show/id1635204267

Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/thebryceeddyshow/

X:https://x.com/Bryceeddy1

Sponsors: 

naturesblaststore.com Code: BRYCE

nationhealthMD.com Code: BRYCE

americanindependencegold.com

 
Next
Next

News With Siaka: Conspiracies, Candace, and the Cost of Clickbait