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Awareness Changes Things

Reem Borrows Author Interview

Unfollow the Leader makes the case that the performance-at-all-costs model of leadership is burning people out, and that success can cost you your health, your relationships, and yourself. What did you most want readers to “unlearn” about leadership?

I think one of the biggest things I wanted people to unlearn is the idea that leadership is primarily about image, status, certainty, control, or constant performance.

So often, we are conditioned to believe leadership means pushing harder, sacrificing ourselves, always appearing strong, always knowing the answers, and tying our worth to outcomes and achievement. For a while, that behaviour is often rewarded. Until eventually the cracks begin to show in our health, our relationships, our nervous system, and our sense of self.

A lot of this happens at a subconscious level.

Intellectually, most people already understand that balance matters, that relationships matter, that health matters, that presence matters. But understanding something consciously and embodying it behaviourally are two very different things. Many of these patterns are built deeply into the psyche over decades through family systems, workplaces, society, fear, survival, conditioning, and identity.

People often do not realise how much of their leadership is being driven by unconscious fear. Fear of failure. Fear of not being enough. Fear of losing control. Fear of being judged. Fear of slowing down.

Somewhere along the way, people disconnect from themselves while trying to become who they think they need to be. They become productive, but not present. Accomplished, but exhausted. Surrounded by people, but emotionally disconnected.

I wanted readers to question the idea that success at any cost is actually success.

For me, leadership is not about becoming somebody important. It is about becoming more conscious, more honest, more grounded, and more responsible for the impact we have on other human beings.

I also wanted people to unlearn the belief that humanity weakens leadership. Some of the strongest leaders I have ever met are deeply self-aware people who can regulate themselves under pressure, hold difficult conversations with care, stay open to feedback, admit mistakes, and create environments where people feel psychologically safe enough to think, contribute, and grow.

That takes far more strength than simply dominating a room.

Health, Head, and Heart is a deceptively simple structure. What took you the longest to understand about the relationship between those three, and what do most leaders get wrong about the order?

What took me the longest to understand is that they are not separate parts of leadership. They constantly affect each other, whether we acknowledge it or not.

You cannot think clearly when your body is exhausted. You cannot lead people well when your nervous system is constantly operating in stress or survival mode. You cannot consistently make values-based decisions when your identity is tied entirely to achievement, approval, or external
validation.

For years, leadership development focused heavily on the “Head.” Strategy, intellect, execution, KPIs, performance. Those things matter. Of course they do. But without Health and Heart, eventually the entire system becomes unstable.

What many of us get wrong is the order.

We sacrifice Health first while chasing success, disconnect from Heart while trying to maintain performance, and eventually even the Head begins to suffer. Decision-making becomes reactive. Relationships deteriorate. Clarity disappears. We begin operating from pressure rather than presence.

And much of this happens unconsciously.

At an intellectual level, most people already know they should rest more, slow down sometimes, prioritise relationships, regulate stress, and take care of themselves. But behaviour is often driven by much deeper subconscious conditioning around productivity, worth, identity, survival, and fear.

A lot of us inherit patterns we never consciously chose.

Health is not just fitness or diet. It is energy, emotional regulation, capacity, sleep, wellbeing, and the overall state of your nervous system.

Heart is not weakness or sentimentality. It is values, courage, emotional intelligence, humility, empathy, connection, and the ability to remain human under pressure.

And the Head functions best when supported by both.

That understanding did not come from theory for me. It came from life. From burnout. From grief. From leadership. From watching incredibly intelligent and capable people slowly disconnect from themselves while trying to hold everything together.

The framework became less about perfect balance and more about awareness. Learning to recognise the subconscious patterns driving our behaviour before the consequences become impossible to ignore.

The S.T.O.P. tool is one of the book’s practical anchors. How did you arrive at that particular intervention, and what does it do that other pause-and-reflect tools don’t?

The S.T.O.P. framework came from years of coaching leaders, teams, and individuals who intellectually knew what to do, but struggled to access that wisdom in real moments of pressure.

That gap fascinated me for years.

I realised most people do not fail because they lack information. The struggle is often that subconscious emotional patterns and conditioned responses take over before conscious awareness has a chance to enter the room.

Intellectually, we often know how we want to behave. We know we should listen more, react less, communicate better, stay calm, lead with empathy, or have more patience. But in moments of stress, fear, exhaustion, ego, or threat, human beings tend to default to deeply wired survival patterns that exist beneath conscious thought.

S.T.O.P. was designed to interrupt that automatic cycle.

It was designed to be simple because in moments of pressure, people rarely access complicated frameworks effectively. There is an art to taking complexity, overwhelm, and moving parts and turning them into practical simplicity that people can actually execute consistently in real life.

What makes it different is that it is not just a mindset tool or a reflective exercise. It is a practical blueprint that helps bring strategy, behaviour, culture, communication, accountability, and execution together in a way that people can actually operationalise day to day.

It breaks things down to the lowest common denominator so people and organisations can implement change step by step rather than becoming overwhelmed by theory.

The framework brings together Health, Head, and Heart through the right operating rhythm, practical templates, behaviours, meeting structures, communication rhythms, accountability processes, and ways of working from beginning to end.

It starts with purpose, goals, values, and culture. It moves into flow, emotional regulation, engagement, clarity, accountability, and execution.

More than anything, it is designed to align the human side of leadership with the operational side of business so they are no longer working against each other.

For me, S.T.O.P. became the blueprint that underpins it all.

The intention was never to create another leadership concept that sounds good intellectually but becomes difficult to apply practically once real pressure enters the room. It was designed to help people turn awareness into behaviour, and behaviour into culture, rhythm, and execution.

Whether it is a one-person business, a family, a small team, or a large global matrix organisation, the human dynamics underneath remain remarkably similar. People still need clarity, trust, emotional awareness, consistency, communication, ownership, and alignment.

S.T.O.P. helps reconnect the body, thoughts, emotions, awareness, behaviour, and organisational rhythm together in a practical way.

It helps create enough space between stimulus and response for a conscious choice to emerge instead of an automatic reaction.

Sometimes that pause lasts five seconds. Sometimes it lasts longer. But within that space, people often reconnect to their values, their intentions, and the version of themselves they actually want to lead from.

I have seen it shift difficult conversations, workplace conflict, parenting moments, leadership decisions, and even the way people speak to themselves internally.

It is important to recognise that most damage in leadership does not happen because people are intentionally harmful. It happens because under pressure, awareness narrows and old protective patterns take over before we even realise it.

S.T.O.P. helps bring awareness back online, while also giving people a practical structure to consistently turn that awareness into behaviour, culture, and execution.

The reflective prompts invite pause and self-examination. What do you hope happens in the reader between the reading and the answering, and what would you say to a reader who skips them?

For me, the space between the reading and the answering is probably where the real work begins.

It is easy to consume ideas intellectually. It is much harder to sit honestly with ourselves.

The prompts were never designed as homework. They were designed as interruptions. Small invitations to slow down long enough to notice patterns, beliefs, fears, behaviours, contradictions, and the ways people may have drifted away from themselves without even realising it.

A lot of what drives human behaviour lives beneath conscious awareness.

We can intellectually understand ourselves far more than we emotionally, behaviourally, or subconsciously embody that understanding. Someone can explain emotional intelligence beautifully while still reacting defensively in relationships or leadership. A person can deeply value presence while living in a constant state of internal urgency.

Awareness changes things, and because there is no limit to awareness, it does not happen instantly or perfectly. But once something is seen clearly, it becomes very difficult to completely unsee it.

I hope readers become curious rather than judgmental of themselves. So many people are carrying pressure, grief, burnout, fear, responsibility, and expectations they have never fully stopped to examine. Sometimes, even one honest question can begin bringing hidden patterns into awareness.

And if someone skips the prompts, that is okay, too. Not everybody is ready to pause immediately. Sometimes people read a book intellectually first and only later realise certain parts stayed with them long after they finished reading.

I think timing matters in growth. But I would gently say this. The book is not really meant to be consumed as information alone. It is meant to be experienced, and the value is not in agreeing with the ideas. It is in noticing where those ideas meet your actual life.

Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon

Tired of trading humanity for performance? Unfollow the Leaderexposes the outdated rules driving burnout, disengagement, and toxic cultures—and replaces them with a practical, values-driven framework for modern leadership.
Drawing on over 25 years across corporate, government, and grassroots sectors, Reem Borrows shows how real leaders align Health, Head, and Heart to create trust, accountability, and sustainable results. With honesty and insight, she invites you to redefine success—not by doing more, but by leading with clarity, courage, and integrity.

This book shows how to align strategy, behaviour, and culture so organisations perform and people thrive. It also includes three practical downloadable resources designed for immediate implementation.

Inside, you will discover how to:
Replace outdated leadership habits with values that inspire genuine trust
Lead with emotional intelligence and empathy, without losing authority
Align personal well-being with professional performance
Build cultures of accountability and psychological safety
Develop self-leadership as the foundation for leading others

Benefits of reading this book:
Authentic Leadership: Lead with integrity, clarity, and confidence
Sustainable Success: Balance well-being and performance for lasting impact
Cultural Transformation: Create teams grounded in trust, safety, and purpose
This is more than a leadership book. It’s a call to rethink how we lead, connect, and create change in the modern world.

Unfollow the Leader

Unfollow the Leader by Reem Borrows is a reflective leadership book built around a clear central conviction: the old, performance-heavy model of leadership is no longer enough, and real leadership now begins with self-awareness, health, emotional intelligence, and values-led action. Borrows frames this through her Health, Head, and Heart approach, moving from self-leadership and purpose to courage, gratitude, relationship intelligence, flow, and practical execution tools like S.T.O.P. What gives the book its pulse is the way she folds personal stories into the framework, from the bruising early career experience of being told it was “my way or the highway,” to the family reunion after war, to the waterfall story where surrender becomes not weakness but wisdom.

Borrows writes best when she lets leadership leave the boardroom and return to the body, the home, the nervous system, the quiet ache of ordinary life. The coffee made for a wife after two years apart stayed with me because it says more about leadership than many polished business models do. It reminds us that presence isn’t soft. It’s strenuous, sacred work. I also appreciated her insistence that health isn’t a decorative add-on to ambition. That idea feels earned, especially when she connects burnout, ego, and disconnection to the way people actually behave under pressure. The book’s ideas are familiar in places, drawing from coaching, mindset work, emotional intelligence, and purpose-led leadership, but Borrows gives them warmth and moral weight.

Stylistically, the book has a generous, conversational quality, almost like sitting with a coach who won’t let you hide behind busyness. The book’s reflective rhythm gives its ideas room to settle, and the recurring themes create a sense of reinforcement. The prompts invite pause and self-examination, which feels fitting for a book so devoted to inner leadership. Borrows is not writing from a distance. She’s writing as someone who has been shaped by mentorship, grief, pressure, faith, mistakes, and hard-won clarity. That emotional openness gives the book its texture. I especially liked the moments where she admits the ego still rises, even in a boardroom, because that honesty keeps the work from becoming glossy or unrealistic.

I came away from Unfollow the Leader feeling challenged and moved. It’s not a book for readers looking for a ruthless corporate playbook or a dense academic treatment of leadership theory. It’s better suited to leaders, coaches, founders, managers, and thoughtful professionals who sense that success without inner alignment has become too expensive. I’d especially recommend it to anyone feeling stretched thin by responsibility, or anyone beginning to understand that influence without presence eventually rings hollow. This is a warm, reflective, and practical book for people who want to lead with more courage and care.

Pages: 226 | ASIN : B0F6Q2WXNG

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The Truth Had to Be Spoken

Reem Borrows Author Interview

From the River to the Sea: Humanizing Freedom is part memoir, part historical reckoning, and part call to action, sharing your story as a Palestinian Christian born in Haifa, offering reflections on leadership, justice, and interconnectedness. Why was this an important book for you to write?

For me, writing this book was not a choice; it was a calling. I had no intention of writing it, and in fact, I was in the middle of chapter four of my upcoming book, “Unfollow the Leader”, when I put it aside, because From the River to the Sea: Humanizing Freedom demanded to be written. The truth had to be spoken, and it came from the deepest part of me.

At first, I wondered how this connected with Dreem Coaching & Consulting, but I came to see it is at the very core of everything we do. You cannot separate business from advocacy, or leadership from humanity. To live aligned with your values is to live fully; to deny them is to become a shell of yourself, trapped in a surface-level existence.

I dug into my soul to give voice to one of the world’s greatest human catastrophes and injustices. Just three weeks after finishing the manuscript and securing Red Thread as my publisher, the situation on the ground took an unthinkable turn, worsening with every passing day. Each time we thought it could not get worse, it multiplied tenfold.

This book was born out of both love and necessity. As a Palestinian, I carry the stories of my family, my people, and my homeland within me. For too long, our voices were silenced, our pain minimised, our humanity stripped away. Writing this was my way of reclaiming our story, showing that behind every headline are real lives, families, dreams, and losses.

The journey of writing has deepened me as a coach, strategist, leader, mother, sister, partner, and friend. It has made me more human. More than history or politics, this book is about love, leadership, justice, and the choices we make each day to live with compassion and integrity.

What is a common misconception you feel people have about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict?

People are often told that the situation is complicated or that it has been going on for centuries. It is neither. This is not an ancient feud; it is an eight-decade-long story of dispossession and occupation, beginning with the loss of Palestinian territories in 1948 with the Nakba (The catastrophe). To call it a “conflict” between two equal sides who cannot get along is deeply misleading. That framing erases the reality of power imbalance and decades of systematic oppression, and how the atrocities of the Jewish Holocaust were, in many ways, transferred onto the Palestinian population in Palestine. When we said never again, that was meant to be upheld as “never again for anybody”

At its core, this was never a battle between Jew and Muslim. Palestinians, whether Jewish, Christian, or Muslim, before 1948 lived together in harmony, as part of a well-functioning social and cultural ecosystem. This was never about religion; it has always been about basic human rights, dignity, and freedom.

Another tragic misconception is that Palestinians are defined only by anger or victimhood. Palestinians have been dehumanised to such an extent that the injustice has been allowed to continue to the unbelievable level we are witnessing today. Yet despite this, we are a people full of resilience, creativity, humour, and extraordinary love for life. When you meet Palestinians, wherever in the world, you encounter a community that continues to nurture hope and joy despite unimaginable hardship. That human dimension is too often ignored, but it is essential to understanding who we are.

Finally, you often hear the misconception that this can never be resolved.  That is simply not true. There is a way forward for all people to live on equal terms, from the River to the Sea.  Peace with justice is possible if all people are afforded the same rights, including the right of return for all. 

What were some ideas that were important for you to share in this book?

I wanted to share three core ideas.

First, that history matters. We cannot heal or move forward if we continue to deny or distort what happened in 1948 during the Nakba, or what continues to happen today. Facing the truth is painful, but it is also the only path towards justice and peace for all.

Second, that leadership is not just about politics or boardrooms. It is about how we show up every day. Fear and division have always been used to justify oppression. Love, courage, and clarity are the antidotes, whether in our families, our communities, or on the world stage.

Third, that interconnectedness is real. The struggles of Palestinians are tied to the struggles of Indigenous peoples in Australia, to movements against slavery and apartheid, to anyone who has been dehumanised. I hoped to remind readers that justice for one group cannot come at the expense of another. It’s either freedom for all, or freedom for none.  It is a clear choice we all must make.

What is one thing that you hope readers take away from From the River to the Sea: Humanizing Freedom?

I hope readers walk away with a deeper sense of empathy and responsibility. This is not just a book about Palestine; it is a book about what it means to be human. If even one reader puts it down and chooses to listen differently, to question the narratives they’ve been told, or to act with more courage in their own sphere of influence, then the book has done its work.

More than anything, I want people to know that freedom is not an abstract idea; it is about human lives. And we all have a role to play in shaping a world where dignity, equality, and compassion are not negotiable.

Author Links: GoodReadsLinkedIn | FacebookWebsite

Discover a new perspective on one of the world’s most enduring struggles.
Are you looking for a fresh and compassionate approach to understanding the Israeli-Palestinian plight?
Do you want to engage in meaningful conversations and explore the human stories at the heart of this deeply misunderstood issue? From the River to the Sea: Humanizing Freedom is your gateway to a deeper understanding of an issue that has gripped the world’s attention for decades. This simplified nonfiction work invites you to transcend borders and stereotypes, offering a comprehensive and empathetic exploration of the Israeli-Palestinian struggle.
What You’ll Discover:
Personal Stories: Dive into the vivid histories, the struggles, and the resilience of individuals living amidst the dispute in a simplified way. Get to know the people behind the headlines, their dreams, and their aspirations.
Unbiased Insight: Benefit from extensive research, providing a well-rounded simplified perspective on the issue from the grassroots.
A Call for Empathy: Join us in fostering empathy as the guiding principle for understanding this deeply rooted issue as a foundation for meaningful dialogue.
Whether you’re a student, a concerned citizen, or a policymaker, From the River to the Sea is an essential resource that invites you to challenge your preconceptions, engage in thoughtful conversations, and embark on a journey toward humanizing freedom for all involved.
Take the first step toward a more harmonious, empathetic, and constructive path forward. Join the conversation today and explore the untold stories of hope and resilience.
Get your copy of From the River to the Sea: Humanizing Freedom and start your journey towards a deeper understanding of this complex issue and the pursuit of a just and peaceful future for all.
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From the River to the Sea: Humanizing Freedom

Reem Borrows’ From the River to the Sea: Humanizing Freedom is part memoir, part historical reckoning, and part call to action. The book weaves her personal story as a Palestinian Christian born in Haifa with broader reflections on leadership, justice, and interconnectedness. Split into two sections, it first unpacks history and politics of the Israeli-Palestinian struggle, and then moves into a more philosophical appeal for compassion, unity, and change. From the haunting memories of the Nakba to the powerful imagery of doctors in Haifa declaring, “Jews and Arabs refuse to be enemies,” Borrows grounds her arguments in lived experience, historical accounts, and spiritual lessons.

What I appreciated most was her ability to keep the writing deeply human. For example, in the introduction she recalls her family’s immigration to Australia, where for the first time they were treated simply as people and not as second-class citizens. That scene with the customs officer in Sydney, who greeted them warmly, stayed with me. It made me feel the sharp contrast she was drawing freedom in one place, prejudice in another. The writing in those moments felt both tender and powerful.

At the same time, there were parts that hit me with a gut-punch. Her retelling of tragedies like the bombing of an eleven-story building in Gaza, or the story of Muhammad al-Durrah and his father shot while seeking cover, is raw and unsettling. She doesn’t let the reader turn away or hide behind easy narratives. I’ll admit, those pages made me angry, not just at the events themselves but at how easily such stories get brushed aside in mainstream discourse. And when she connects this to other historical injustices, slavery, apartheid, colonization of Indigenous peoples, it made me reflect on how recurring patterns of fear and dehumanization shape so much of human history.

The most thought-provoking sections, though, were where Borrows shifts from history to mindset. She leans on her background in leadership and personal development, blending in lessons from Buddhism, Christianity, and even corporate leadership training. At first it felt almost strange reading about Gaza alongside references to Ernest Hemingway or global business programs but over time I saw her point. She’s trying to show that leadership, love, and fearlessness are not just for politics but for how we live and act daily. Her metaphor of “finding the other tigers and lions” instead of arguing with “donkeys” who refuse truth made me laugh, but it also stuck with me as a reminder not to waste energy on futile battles.

In the end, the book is equal parts lament and hope. It’s not just about Palestine and Israel; it’s about humanity’s tendency to repeat its worst mistakes and our stubborn hope that we can learn to do better. I’d recommend From the River to the Sea to anyone who wants to step outside the usual headlines and feel the human dimension of the conflict. It’s also for readers who enjoy books that mix personal story with big, sometimes uncomfortable questions about justice, love, and what it really means to be free. It’s not always an easy read, but it’s one that leaves you with both a heavy heart and a sense of responsibility.

Pages: 198 | ASIN : B0CN42975V

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