When Problem-Solving Becomes a Trap: Are You Addicted to the Obstacle?
The Hidden Side of Problem-Solving
I’ve taught for years that your goal has to be bigger than your obstacle.
If it’s not, you’ll stay parked at the problem.
Focused on what’s in front of you instead of where you’re headed.
That principle still holds.
But over time, I’ve seen something else.
There are leaders with clear goals.
Strong vision.
Real capability.
And they’re still stuck.
Not because the obstacle is too large.
Not because the goal isn’t compelling.
They’re stuck because they’ve become addicted to the obstacle.
What It Means to Be Addicted to the Obstacle
Being addicted to the obstacle doesn’t look dramatic.
It looks responsible.
You’re the one people call when things break.
You handle complications.
You fix what others avoid.
You’re competent under pressure.
At first, that’s a strength.
But somewhere along the way, problem-solving stops being a skill and starts becoming your identity.
You wake up scanning for what needs fixing.
What needs adjusting.
What needs rescuing.
And there’s always something.
When things run smoothly, it feels unfamiliar.
When there’s no fire to put out, you almost feel unnecessary.
That’s the shift.
That’s the trap.
The Problem-Solving Trap in Leadership and Business
The problem-solving trap shows up quietly.
You stay in troubleshooting mode.
You react instead of build.
You manage complexity instead of removing it.
Fixing feels productive.
Fixing feels valuable.
Fixing feels like leadership.
But fixing forever keeps you cycling in the same place.
Progress requires something different.
It requires:
- Sustaining success instead of constantly repairing failure
- Building systems instead of reacting to breakdowns
- Letting things work without your constant intervention
That’s uncomfortable for high-capacity leaders.
Because fixing proves your value.
But building reduces your visibility.
And growth often feels quieter than chaos.
Why High Performers Stay Stuck
If this resonates, it doesn’t mean you’re unfocused.
It doesn’t mean you lack discipline.
It means you’re used to solving instead of advancing.
The obstacle becomes the place where you feel most competent.
So you stay there longer than necessary.
You redesign it.
You revisit it.
You extend it.
Without realizing it, you protect it.
Because if the obstacle disappears, something new begins.
And that next level may require:
- Delegation instead of control
- Structure instead of hustle
- Sustainability instead of urgency
That shift can feel more threatening than the obstacle itself.
How to Break the Obstacle Addiction Cycle
If you want to stop being addicted to the obstacle, the shift isn’t dramatic.
It’s strategic.
Start here:
1. Build Systems, Not Just Solutions
If you solve the same problem twice, it’s a system issue.
Design something that prevents repetition.
2. Reduce Complexity Instead of Managing It
Complexity makes you feel needed.
Clarity makes you scalable.
3. Let Success Run Without Interference
Not every smooth season needs improvement.
Sometimes progress requires restraint.
And then ask yourself one honest question:
If this obstacle disappeared tomorrow, what would I have to face next?
Don’t answer quickly.
Sit with it.
Because sometimes the obstacle isn’t the thing in your way.
It’s the thing protecting you from the next level of growth.
Growth Begins When You Stop Needing the Problem
Obstacles are meant to be passed through.
Not maintained.
Not personalized.
Not extended for comfort.
Growth happens when you no longer need a problem to prove your value.
For me, that’s the decision today.
I’m not creating problems to stay busy.
I’m not living in constant repair mode.
I’m building beyond the need to fix everything.
That’s where real leadership growth begins.


