Not everything that disrupts you is the same.
Some things are noise.
Some things are distorted.
If you don’t know the difference
You will respond incorrectly to both.
What Noise Is
Noise is external.
It is a distraction.
Opinion.
Unsolicited input.
Background commentary that does not require your action.
Noise is constant.
People talking.
Opinions being shared.
Reactions that have nothing to do with your direction.
Noise is not the problem.
Your response to it is.
What Distortion Is
Distortion is internal.
It is how you interpret what you hear.
How you filter information.
How you reshape reality based on emotion, assumption, or past experience.
Distortion sounds like:
This isn’t going to work.
They’re questioning me.
I’m not ready yet.
Even when that may not be true.
Noise is what is said.
Distortion is what you make it mean.
The Difference
Noise can be ignored.
Distortion cannot.
Because noise stays outside.
Distortion changes how you think, decide, and act.
Noise distracts.
Distortion misleads.
Liberation: Recognizing What’s Actually Happening
Most people try to silence noise.
But the real issue is distortion.
You can remove distractions and still hesitate
because the internal narrative is still off.
The moment you recognize this, something shifts.
You stop blaming the environment
and start examining your interpretation.
Visibility: Seeing Your Filters Clearly
You begin to notice:
What you’re hearing
versus what you’re telling yourself about it.
Where you are adding meaning that wasn’t there.
Where you are assuming instead of verifying.
Where past experience is shaping present decisions.
You see the gap.
Between reality
and your interpretation of it.
Transformation: Filtering with Clarity
Now you lead differently.
You filter noise without reacting to it.
You challenge distortion before acting on it.
You ask:
Is this relevant?
Is this accurate?
Is this useful?
You stop reacting to everything you hear
and start responding based on what is real.
Integration: The Leadership Reality
Here is the reality:
Noise will always exist.
It comes with visibility.
But distortion
That is what limits leadership.
Because if your perception is off, your decisions will be off.
Strong leaders don’t try to control the noise.
They refine their clarity.
They separate:
signal from distraction
fact from assumption
reality from interpretation
That becomes your posture.
Not reactive.
Not distracted.
But clear, grounded, and decisive.
Closing Reflection
What noise am I giving too much attention to?
Where am I distorting what is actually happening?
What would change if I responded only to what is real?
I filter noise and correct distortion.









