There’s a particular kind of frustration that doesn’t announce itself loudly. It builds quietly, over months, through small moments that individually seem manageable but collectively start to wear at something fundamental in you. The moment you name it, everything becomes clearer.
This post is about accountability. Not the corporate buzzword version. The real kind — where words have weight, actions have consequences, and people are expected to stand behind both. Follow along at @craig.spicer where I share the unfiltered reality of leadership and what it actually takes to build something that lasts.
The Kind Person’s Dilemma
I’ve spent the better part of my life trying to look after people. It’s not a strategy — it’s just who I am. I’m laid-back by nature, I genuinely care about the people around me, and I will go out of my way to support, encourage, and invest in others. Most people who know me well would tell you the same.
What I’ve learned — particularly over the last 12 months — is that some people read that as permission.
Not consciously, perhaps. But somewhere along the line, kindness gets mistaken for compliance. A relaxed manner gets read as indifference to standards. And when you eventually respond with the same directness that’s been directed at you, or when you hold someone to something they said or did, the reaction is one of genuine surprise.
As if the rules only applied one way.
A Difficult 12 Months — And What It Revealed
I’ll be honest with you. The last six to twelve months have been some of the most demanding I can remember. Business pressures, a significant move, rising costs, and the kind of accumulated stress that doesn’t always show on the surface but absolutely affects how you show up day to day.
During that period, I wasn’t always as robust as I needed to be. I let some things go that I shouldn’t have. I absorbed more than I should have absorbed. And in doing so, I inadvertently gave some people the impression that the standards I hold — for myself and for those around me — had softened.
They hadn’t. I had just been running low.
The last two to three weeks have felt different. I’m back. Recalibrated, clear-headed, and reminded of exactly what I stand for. And with that clarity has come a sharper view of a pattern I’d been too stretched to address properly — people who are very comfortable saying and doing whatever they like, right up until the moment they’re held to it.
The Accountability Gap
Accountability isn’t a punishment. It’s a basic feature of any functioning relationship, team, or organisation. You say something — you own it. You do something — you own that too. The consequences of your words and actions belong to you, whether you intended them or not.
What I’ve encountered repeatedly in recent months is a significant gap between people’s willingness to act freely and their willingness to accept the consequences of that freedom.
People say things carelessly, then reframe them when challenged. People make commitments, then act as though the commitment was never made. And when you respond — calmly, clearly, and with the expectation that they stand behind what they said — the reaction is often one of offence.
It’s a revealing moment. Because the people who struggle most with being held accountable are almost always the people who’ve never genuinely had to be.
Opinions Are a Two-Way Street
This is the part I want to be particularly clear about.
I have no issue with people sharing their views. Healthy disagreement is one of the most valuable things that can happen in any conversation. I actively encourage it. What I do take issue with is the specific dynamic where someone feels entirely comfortable telling me what I should be doing, where I’m going wrong, or what the right answer is — and then becomes visibly uncomfortable the moment I disagree, push back, or offer a perspective rooted in my own experience.
Because that experience is not insignificant.
Twenty-five years working across national governing bodies, the British military, building sports programmes from the ground up, developing coaches, running a business — that body of work earns a perspective worth hearing. It doesn’t make me infallible. It doesn’t mean I’m always right. But it does mean that when I offer a view, it comes from somewhere real.
Experience doesn’t make you arrogant. It makes you qualified. And there’s a meaningful difference between the two.
If you’re going to offer an opinion, be prepared to receive one. If you’re going to challenge someone’s thinking, be prepared to have your own challenged in return. That’s not aggression — that’s an honest conversation between adults.
What Holding People Accountable Actually Looks Like
There’s a version of accountability that people fear — aggressive, personal, point-scoring. That’s not what I’m talking about.
Holding someone accountable, done properly, is measured. It’s clear. It’s direct without being cruel. It says: “You said this. You did this. I’m not going to pretend otherwise, and I’m not going to lower my standards to make you more comfortable.”
Reacting is emotional and immediate. Responding is considered and intentional. When I hold someone to their words or actions, it comes from a place of principle, not frustration.
Being robust is not the same as being unkind. You can be warm and firm at the same time. In fact, the most respectful thing you can do for another person is take them seriously enough to expect them to own what they’ve said and done. Letting people off the hook isn’t kindness — it’s just easier.
Getting Back in the Game
The last few weeks have reminded me of something important. Standards don’t disappear during hard periods — they just become harder to maintain. And when you come back to yourself after a difficult stretch, you see very clearly what was allowed to slip and what needs to be recalibrated.
This post isn’t a rant. It’s a reminder — for me as much as anyone reading it.
- Own your words.
- Own your actions.
- Expect others to do the same.
- When they don’t — be measured, be clear, and hold the line.
That’s not a personality flaw. That’s leadership.
For more on how I think about leadership, accountability, and building something real, head over to the Crazy Strength blog — including my recent post on knowing when to lead and when to follow.
Your Move
Think about one conversation or situation in the last month where you let something go that you shouldn’t have. Not because it wasn’t worth addressing — but because it felt easier not to.
What would it look like to go back and hold that line, calmly and clearly?
That’s where this starts. Connect with me at @craig.spicer — I’d genuinely like to hear where this lands for you.