Mindful leadership book for new managers and first-time managers: how to lead people well without losing yourself, build trust through listening, give feedback that lands, and survive your first five years managing people.Six weeks into her promotion to medical director, Priya was not sleeping. She had been an exceptional clinician for fourteen years. Now she was overseeing thirty-one people, four of whom had been her peers a month ago, and she said without any particular drama: "I don't know who I am at work anymore." Executive coach Imogen Tate had heard this exact sentence before — from engineers in Seattle, founders in Brooklyn, directors in Minneapolis. This book is for Priya, and for you, if you recognize anything in that story.Most leadership advice is written for people who already speak loudly. This practical management book is for everyone else. Over 14 years of one-on-one executive coaching, Tate found the same pattern: managers did not have a knowledge problem. They knew, abstractly, what to do. They were not doing it — because no one had taught them to manage their own inner state while managing other people. This book closes that gap across 22 chapters: the shift from performance to presence, open listening as the rarest skill in professional life, the one-on-one that does not waste an hour, feedback that lands without crushing, delegating without becoming the bottleneck, and how to lead through change you did not choose. Every chapter ends with one small "Try this" you can run at work tomorrow.Inside this leadership and management book:Presence before performance — Three moves (threshold pause, first-look noticing, simple silence) shift your inner camera from watching yourself lead to watching what is actually happening; "the substrate on which every other skill in this book depends"Open listening vs. advice listening — The single rarest skill in professional life: "giving over a real share of your processing power to the other person" so the second question comes from what they said, not what you pre-loadedThe one-on-one that doesn't waste an hour — Driven by the direct report's agenda; "you are building, in these hours, the substrate on which the rest of your leadership rests" — trust that makes crises manageableFeedback that lands without crushing — Five principles: specific behavior (not character), within 48 hours, always private, one piece at a time, with a concrete alternative — plus word-for-word opening scriptsDelegating without becoming the bottleneck — Addresses the three emotional drivers behind not letting go and the "recall pattern" failure mode managers never see comingBurnout early-warning system — Early, middle, and late signs for your team and for yourself, with three actions that prevent a manageable problem from becoming a crisisYear-by-year map for the first five years — Year one: survival. Year two: settling. Year three: confidence. Year four: compounding. Year five: synthesis — so you know when what you're feeling is normalThis is not the corporate-wellness version of mindfulness; there is no app to download. What Tate means by mindful is narrower and older: noticing the rise of your own irritation before it leaves your mouth, knowing the difference between a decision you are making because it is right and one you are making because you want the discomfort in your chest to go away. Five extended case studies, a practical toolkit of scripts and frameworks, letters to specific kinds of new managers, and a complete year-by-year roadmap make this the most practical first-time manager guide you will keep returning to.For readers of Kim Scott's Radical Candor and Marcus Buckingham's First, Break All the Rules.