
✦ THE REFLECTION SERIES · CAPT. SHAJI KUMAR
The Buck Stops Here.
On the weight that only one person in the room can never put down — and why that weight, carried rightly, is the highest privilege of leadership.
By Capt. Shaji Kumar · The Reflection Series
There is a phrase that has echoed through every corridor of power, every boardroom, every command post, and every founder’s office since Harry Truman first placed a small wooden sign on his desk in the Oval Office.
The buck stops here.
Five words. No ambiguity. No footnotes. No asterisk leading to a clause that redistributes the weight.
Most people who quote it have never truly felt its meaning. Because understanding those five words intellectually is entirely different from waking up at 3am with them sitting on your chest.
The leader is the only person in the organisation who does not have the luxury of pointing anywhere but inward.
The Architecture of Accountability
Here is the truth that no leadership manual fully prepares you for: every person in your organisation has an exit from accountability that you do not.
The team member who made the error can apologise. They can resign. They can move to another company, update their LinkedIn profile, and begin again with a largely clean slate. Their mistake follows them — but at a manageable distance. Time erodes it. A new role reframes it.
The middle manager who missed the target can point upward. They were working within a framework they did not design, executing a strategy they did not author, with resources that were not sufficient. There is always something above them to gesture toward.
Even the senior executive, one step below the top, carries the comfort of collective decision-making. The board approved it. The committee endorsed it. The consensus was clear.
But the leader — the one at the top, the founder, the CEO, the head of the organisation — has none of these exits. The apology is not enough. The resignation is not a resolution. The pointing upward finds only open sky. Every decision, every failure, every consequence of every call ever made under their watch circles back — inevitably, reliably, without exception — to their table.
The Word Everyone Else Gets to Use
Let us talk honestly about the word “sorry.”
It is a powerful word. In the right hands, offered with genuine remorse and a commitment to repair, it can rebuild trust, restore relationships, and close wounds that seemed permanent.
For most people in an organisation, sorry is also sufficient. It is the price of the mistake. Pay it, absorb the consequences — which may include losing the job — and move forward. The maximum cost is bounded. A job lost is a job that can be found again. A career disrupted is a career that can be rebuilt.
The leader does not have this arithmetic.
For everyone else, sorry is a settlement. For the leader, sorry is only the beginning of a much longer reckoning.
When a leader says sorry — genuinely, publicly, with weight — they are not closing the file. They are opening it. Because what follows sorry, for the person at the top, is a cascade of consequences that cannot be contained by a single word or a single act of contrition.
- Investors who trusted the vision reassess.
- Teams who believed in the direction begin to question their own loyalty to it.
- Clients who built their own plans around yours recalibrate.
- Competitors who were watching take note — and move.
- Boards who extended confidence begin to sharpen their pencils.
- And the market — indifferent, unsentimental, and without mercy — simply adjusts its valuation.
Sorry does not stop any of that. For the leader, accountability is not an event. It is a condition. Permanent, unrelenting, and non-negotiable.
The Catch-22 That No One Warned You About
Here is where leadership becomes genuinely, structurally unfair — and the sooner a leader accepts this, the more effective they become.
The leader must take the risk. That is the job. Without risk, there is no vision, no growth, no transformation, no reason for the organisation to exist beyond the maintenance of the status quo. Risk is not a feature of leadership — it is the definition of it.
And yet every risk the leader takes is a risk that, if it fails, lands entirely and exclusively on them.
They did not design the economic conditions that shifted. They did not engineer the competitor’s move that changed the landscape. They did not anticipate the geopolitical event, the regulatory change, the technology disruption. And yet — when the outcome falls short — the risk was theirs. The judgment was theirs. The decision to proceed was theirs.
This is the Catch-22: You must take the risk to lead. But there is no one to share it with when it does not work. You step forward alone. You carry it alone. And you answer for it alone.
The Leader’s Catch-22 — No Exit, Only Ownership
| EVERYONE ELSE • Can say sorry and move on • Can lose the job — and start again • Risk is bounded and recoverable • Reputation is personal, containable • Can point upward — “I was told to” • Tomorrow is still relatively clean | THE LEADER • Sorry is not a strategy • Losing the role is the beginning, not the end • Risk is total — financial, reputational, human • Reputation carries the weight of every decision • There is no upward to point to • Tomorrow carries everything that happened today |
The columns above are not a complaint. They are a contract. A contract that every genuine leader signs — usually without reading the fine print — the moment they accept the responsibility of the top seat.
The Loneliness That Comes With the Title
Leadership at the top is lonely. Not in the way that word is sometimes used casually — as a synonym for solitude or introversion. Lonely in a structural, existential sense.
Everyone around the leader has someone above them to consult, to defer to, to share the weight with. The leader has no one above. The board is not above — they are alongside, with their own interests and mandates. The mentor is not above — they advise, but they do not carry.
And this loneliness is not something to be fixed. It is something to be inhabited. The leader who spends their time searching for someone to share the ultimate accountability with is a leader who has not yet truly accepted the role.
The loneliness of the top is not a problem to be solved. It is a condition to be led from.
The most effective leaders I have worked with have made a quiet peace with this. They build strong teams — not to distribute the accountability, but to increase the quality of the decisions that accountability demands. They seek counsel — not to avoid the weight, but to carry it more wisely. They stay close to people who tell them the truth — not because truth makes the burden lighter, but because it makes the decisions cleaner.
The Reframe That Changes Everything
Here is where I want to shift the arc of this reflection. Because everything I have written above is true — and it is only half the story.
The buck stops here is not only a burden. It is a distinction.
In an entire organisation — sometimes hundreds, sometimes thousands of people — there is exactly one person for whom the full weight of every outcome, every decision, every risk, and every result is non-negotiable. One person whose name is on the line in a way that no one else’s is.
That is not a curse. It is the mark of genuine leadership. And it is extraordinarily rare.
Most people will live their entire professional lives never truly knowing what it means to be the final answer. Never experiencing the particular clarity — and the particular terror — of a decision that is entirely, irreversibly, consequentially yours. They will always have someone above them. Always have a committee to hide in. Always have the word sorry available as a genuine resolution.
You do not. And that is not a misfortune. It is an identity.
The leader who understands this — who stops grieving the exits they do not have and starts inhabiting the seat they do — becomes something qualitatively different from the people around them. Not better. Not superior. But different in a way that matters. Tested in a way that cannot be faked. Forged in a way that cannot be replicated by anyone who has not stood where they stand.
The buck does not stop at your table because life is unfair. It stops there because you are the only one equipped to answer it.
What the Leader Who Carries It Well Looks Like
In my years of coaching leaders across industries, the ones who carry this weight with genuine effectiveness share a handful of traits that are worth naming.
- They never pretend the weight isn’t there. They do not perform invulnerability. They acknowledge — to themselves, and often to their teams — that the accountability is real, the stakes are high, and the decisions are hard. This honesty does not weaken them. It earns the trust of everyone watching.
- They decide anyway. The weight does not become paralysis. They take the council, absorb the analysis, listen to the room — and then they decide. Clearly. On time. Without the endless deferral that masquerades as due diligence.
- They own the outcomes — all of them. Not only the ones that worked. They stand in front of the team, the board, the client, the market — when things fall short — and they say: this was mine. Not the team’s. Not the conditions. Mine. And then they say what comes next.
- They do not confuse accountability with self-destruction. Owning the outcome does not mean flagellating yourself indefinitely. The leader who makes peace with a bad decision, extracts the lesson, and moves forward is infinitely more effective than one who carries every past failure as a permanent indictment.
- They remember why they accepted the seat. The vision. The mission. The people they are building something for. On the days when the weight is heaviest, it is the reason for carrying it that makes it possible to keep going.
The Privilege in the Burden
I want to close this reflection with something that may seem counterintuitive — but which I believe with complete conviction, having seen it in the lives of the leaders who do this well.
The buck stopping at your table is a privilege.
Not a comfortable one. Not an easy one. Not one that comes without cost, without sleepless nights, without the particular exhaustion of being the person who cannot pass it on.
But a privilege nonetheless.
Because the alternative — a life in which nothing of ultimate consequence is ever yours, in which every decision can be softened with a committee and every failure can be redirected with an apology — is a life lived at a remove from the thing that makes leadership meaningful.
You were not put at the top of the table to be comfortable. You were put there to answer. And the fact that you are the only one who can — in your organisation, in your context, in your moment — is not a sentence.
It is a calling.
The weight of the buck is the price of the vision. Pay it. Carry it. And lead from it. Because no one else in the room can.
| ✦ FROM THE AUTHOR Words that go deeper than the blog. If this reflection stirred something in you, these books were written for exactly that moment. | |
| 📖 Health in Your Hands Your body is your first boardroom. The leader who cannot manage their own health cannot sustain the weight of accountability. Read on Amazon → | 🧠 Stress — The Silent Killer Within A 21-Day Acupressure system to reset your nervous system, reduce anxiety and reclaim your health naturally. Read on Amazon → |
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| ABOUT THE AUTHOR Capt. Shaji Kumar Capt. Shaji Kumar is a Leadership Coach, Author, and Speaker working with professionals and entrepreneurs who are ready to lead with clarity and courage. He is the author of Health in Your Hands and Stress — The Silent Killer Within, and his upcoming book Built, Not Given is written for entrepreneurs who were never handed a headstart. Connect with him, access his books, and join his inner circle at: linktr.ee/skcjos |
| LET’S STAY CONNECTED Join the inner circle. Leadership insights. Early access to Built, Not Given. Coaching opportunities. No noise — just substance, when it matters. ✉️ Sign up here: linktr.ee/skcjos 📅 Book a coaching appointment: LinkedIn → ✉️ Write directly: skcjos@gmail.com |
The buck stops here.
Not because you have no choice.
Because you are the choice.
— Capt. Shaji Kumar · The Reflection Series
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