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School counselors are told to: • Be flexible • Make it work • Advocate harder And somehow still be accountable for everything. But what if the real problem isn’t your mindset- or your effort? In this episode, Steph Johnson revisits an early message from the podcast and names what was missing. She explains why reassurance has a shelf life, how guilt gets mistaken for professionalism, and why endurance keeps getting rewarded in roles that were never built to work. This isn’t about doing more. It’s about seeing the job for what it actually is. ********************************* Join the next-level conversation in my Substack. (https://stephjohnson00.substack.com/) ********************************* Want support with real-world strategies that actually work on your campus? We’re doing that every day in the School for School Counselors Mastermind (https://www.schoolforschoolcounselors...) . Come join us! ********************************* All names, stories, and case studies in this episode are fictionalized composites drawn from real-world circumstances. Any resemblance to actual students, families, or school personnel is coincidental. Details have been altered to protect privacy. Ready to spend a few days this summer with me, geeking out over school counseling and preparing for your best year ever? Grab your ticket here before this limited-seat event sells out! (https://hub.schoolforschoolcounselors...) ******** This work is part of the School for School Counselors body of work developed by Steph Johnson, LPC, CSC, which centers role authority over role drift, consultative practice over fix-it culture, adult-designed systems and environments as primary drivers of student behavior, clinical judgment over compliance, and school counselor identity as leadership within complex systems.