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How to raise leaders: Lessons from Sadhguru parents should learn and understand first

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Jan 14, 2026, 12:36 IST
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1/5

What parents should know when raising future leaders

Every parent says they want to raise a leader. Not a follower. Not someone who waits to be told what to do. Someone confident. Someone who speaks up. Someone who can handle the world without falling apart.
And yet, many parents unknowingly do the opposite.
Most parents imagine leadership as confidence, success, and respect. They picture their child doing well in school, standing out, being admired. So they push. They protect. They plan every step.
But leadership doesn’t grow in perfect conditions. It grows in messy moments. In small failures. In uncomfortable choices. And that’s where things start to break down.

2/5

Sadhguru’s quotes to help parents go in the right direction

He need not know everything


Here Sadhguru breaks one of the most popular and infamous myths about raising leaders. He says a leader doesn't have to know everything. "Most leaders do not know much, but they are able to see certain things that other people are missing and they are able to put people together for a certain common purpose. That makes them leaders," he says.


Leaders either transform situations or transform people's lives


Sadhguru says leadership is a responsibility that has a huge impact on many lives. "Essentially leadership also means, either you are transforming people’s lives directly, or you are transforming situations which will in turn lead to transformation of life for other people. So transformation and leadership cannot be separated," he says.


A leader should have a vision


"What people expect from a leader is that, first of all, he is straight. People do not appreciate you manipulating them. You do not have to be brilliant or a genius or a super human to be a leader. You are straight – your integrity is always there – and you have some vision and insight into a few things. That makes you a leader," he says.


A leader sees what others don't see


Sadhguru emphasizes on the key trait of leadership which is being observant. "A leader is someone who has insight into the situation in which he exists; he sees what others are not able to see. If one is able to pay enough attention, there is nothing in the universe that is not open to you. But not everybody has the same level of attention to details. He must be a symbol of integrity and must be able to inspire the best in those around him," he says.

3/5

Why parents need to learn first

Here’s the uncomfortable truth. You can’t raise a leader if you’re not willing to unlearn a few things yourself.
Leadership is not about control. But parenting often is. Leadership is about decision-making. But parents often decide everything. Leadership needs resilience. But many parents rush in to fix every problem.
And it’s not because parents are wrong. It’s because they’re scared.
Scared their child will fail. Scared they’ll fall behind. Scared they’ll be judged. So parents step in too soon, speak too much, and steer too hard.
And slowly, without meaning to, they train the child to wait. To ask. To look for approval. That’s not how leaders are built.

4/5

Where parents commonly go wrong

One big mistake is confusing achievement with leadership. Good grades don’t automatically mean strong leadership skills. Neither do trophies or certificates. A child can excel on paper and still struggle to make decisions, handle pressure, or speak up in real life.
Another mistake is over-correction. When children are constantly told how to sit, talk, behave, respond, they stop trusting their own judgment. They become careful instead of curious. And leaders need curiosity more than perfection.
And sometimes, parents confuse love with protection. Shielding a child from discomfort feels kind. But discomfort teaches problem-solving. It teaches emotional control. It teaches grit.

5/5

What actually helps build leaders

Leaders grow when children are allowed to make age-appropriate choices. Even wrong ones. Especially wrong ones. They grow when parents listen more than they lecture. When questions are met with curiosity instead of correction. When effort is noticed, not just outcomes. And parents don’t need to be perfect role models. They just need to be honest ones. Saying “I was wrong.” Saying “I don’t know, let’s figure it out.” Saying “That was hard, but you handled it.”
Those moments teach more than any speech ever could.

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Copyright © May 12, 2026, 03.31PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service