Mario Sikora

Mario Sikora

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Advancing the Enneagram.

03/15/2026

Harrison Ford, “Shrinking,” and the Preserving Type Five of the ATA Enneagram

03/15/2026

Dr. Gregory House's famous line from the show “House”--”everybody lies”-- isn’t as simple as it sounds. Most people remember it as cynicism—the cranky doctor who doesn't trust his patients. But House was making a subtler point. As he put it in one episode: "It's a basic truth of the human condition that everybody lies. The only variable is about what."
House wasn't saying people are fundamentally dishonest. He was saying that everyone—without exception—has circumstances under which they'll shade the truth, omit critical details, or construct a narrative that protects them from something uncomfortable. His diagnostic method flowed directly from this insight: don't rely on what patients tell you; look at the symptoms, the bloodwork, the evidence. The data doesn't have an ego to protect.
I've spent over 25 years coaching C-suite leaders, and I can tell you that the relevance to senior leadership is immediate and uncomfortable. The higher you go in an organization, the more the information you receive has been filtered, massaged, and sanitized. Not necessarily out of malice—usually out of self-preservation, conflict avoidance, or a genuine desire to bring solutions rather than problems. But the effect is the same: the CEO often has the least-accurate picture of what's actually happening on the ground.
The smarter executives I've worked with understand this intuitively. They build systems—skip-level meetings, anonymous surveys, trusted outside advisors—that function like House's lab tests: sources of information that bypass the human tendency to tell powerful people what they want to hear.
But here's where it gets harder. House's principle applied to himself, too—and this is the part most leaders miss. The most dangerous lies in the C-suite aren't the ones coming up the chain. They're the ones leaders tell themselves. "My team is aligned." "The strategy is working; we just need more time." "I don't have any blind spots on this one."
Self-deception at the top has an outsized blast radius. When a mid-level manager avoids a hard truth, the damage is contained. When a CEO does it, the whole organization drifts.
So what do you do with this? You treat your own certainty the way House treated a patient's self-report—with respectful skepticism. You surround yourself with people who will tell you what you don't want to hear, and you make it safe for them to do so. And you build the organizational equivalent of diagnostic tests: metrics, feedback loops, and reality checks that don't depend on anyone's willingness to be candid.
Everybody lies. The leaders who thrive are the ones who build their decision-making around that fact rather than pretending they're the exception.

03/14/2026

Can you explain it to a skeptical CEO in five minutes? If not, it's too complicated. Mario and Maria Jose have mastered the art of making the Enneagram accessible to time-pressed executives. The ATA Certification Program teaches you the same practical, streamlined approach that opens doors in the C-suite.

03/13/2026

The Transmitting Five Subtype at Work: Detached Transmitting

03/13/2026

Working Our Way Through the Instinctual Biases: Coaching Preservers

03/11/2026

Everyone loves the "lean into your strengths" advice. And it works — if you want to stay where you are.
But if you want to grow, there are real gaps you have to face. Your Enneagram type and instinctual bias don't just tell you what you're good at — they point directly to the places you tend to avoid. The inner objections, the skills you'd rather outsource than develop.
Growth starts when you stop working around your weaknesses and start working through them.
From the Enneagram in a Movie Podcast, part of the Awareness to Action Podcast
Network.

03/10/2026

Early in your career, leaning on your strengths is enough. But as you take on more
responsibility, the gaps start to matter.
Knowing what to outsource is smart. But knowing what you need to develop — even when it doesn't come naturally — is what separates people who plateau from people who keep growing. The ATA Enneagram can show you exactly where those developmental edges are.

From the Awareness to Action Enneagram Podcast.

03/10/2026

Trust matters when you're coaching leaders who run billion-dollar organizations. Mario and Maria Jose have earned that trust over 40+ years working with C-suite executives globally. The ATA Enneagram Certification teaches you the same practical, no-nonsense approach that makes senior leaders say, 'Finally, something I can actually use.'

03/09/2026

Most people climb to middle management on the strength of their dominant instinctual bias — the skills that come naturally and directly relate to the role. But that's often where the climb stalls.
The reason? The next level demands abilities tied to the parts of your instinctual bias profile that you've been neglecting. The same pattern that drove your success becomes the ceiling you can't break through — until you develop the rest.

From the Awareness to Action Enneagram Podcast.


03/06/2026

The Navigating Five Subtype at Work: Detached Navigating

03/04/2026

Think Enneagram Fives are cold and emotionless? Think again.
The "dirty secret" about Fives is that they feel deeply — they just keep it locked away. It's not that feelings are absent. It's that Fives are afraid of what happens when they let them out.
That's a completely different thing, and understanding the difference changes how you see every Five in your life.

From the Enneagram in a Movie Podcast, part of the Awareness to Action Podcast Network.

03/03/2026

Sherlock Holmes doesn't just solve crimes — he sees what everyone else walks right past. That obsessive observation, the relentless accumulation of knowledge, the ability to extrapolate massive conclusions from the smallest details — that's the Enneagram Five strategy in action.
In this clip, we break down what makes Sherlock one of the most recognizable Fives in fiction, and why not every Five looks the same.

From the Enneagram in a Movie Podcast, part of the Awareness to Action Podcast Network.

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