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“You don’t know the answer because you haven’t asked the right question.”

When You’re Overwhelmed, What Can a Coach Really Do?

By John Gendron — 01/20/2026 — Fundamental

Most people don’t think about hiring a coach until life becomes heavier than expected. Maybe responsibilities keep piling up. Maybe you’re reacting in ways you don’t like. Maybe stress has been running the show longer than you want to admit.

And then the question appears:
“Is coaching the right kind of help for me?”

It’s not an easy question to answer, especially with all the misinformation floating around. Coaching is often portrayed as bossy, fluffy, unregulated, or something people try when they can’t get their act together. None of that is true.

So let’s walk through what coaching actually is, what it isn’t, and why stress management coaching can be such a powerful turning point when life feels like it’s too much.

What Coaching Is (And What It Isn’t)

Professional coaching begins with some core assumptions; simple, but powerful:

  1. You are not broken. Coaching is not about diagnosing, treating, or fixing anything. If someone has medical or mental-health issues, those belong with licensed professionals.
  1. You already have strengths, insights, and abilities worth building on. A coach does not hand out answers. The client’s own wisdom is what drives the process.
  1. Most communication is nonverbal. A good coach listens between the lines, noting tone, pause, energy, hesitation, and body language; to clarify what matters most.
  1. The client chooses their direction and actions. Coaches don’t tell people what to do. Clients are responsible for their own decisions and growth.

These assumptions form the foundation of a respectful, adult-to-adult coaching relationship designed for forward movement.

How Coaching Differs From Therapy, Consulting, and Mentoring

There are several “talking” professions, and each serves a different purpose.

Therapy / Counseling: Helps people heal, process trauma, understand the past, and restore emotional or mental balance.

Consulting: Analyzes problems and provides expert advice or solutions.

Mentoring / Teaching: Transfers skills or knowledge from someone experienced to someone learning.

Coaching: Coaching has a different focus.
A coach is a facilitator. Someone who:

  • helps you explore possibilities
  • asks questions that sharpen awareness
  • reflects what they see
  • helps you stay accountable
  • supports forward movement

A helpful way to visualize it:

The coach holds the lantern.
You choose the path.

No advice-giving. No judgment. No pressure to fit into someone else’s template. Just structured, consistent support to help you move toward the life you want.

Why Questions Matter More Than Answers

At the top of this article, I included a small idea:
You don’t know the answer because you haven’t asked the right question.

This belief connects sages from Socrates to Einstein; and it sits at the heart of coaching.
Good questions focus your attention. They make you notice options you couldn’t see before.

Here’s an everyday example:

You buy a new car, and suddenly you see the same make and model everywhere. It’s not that the world changed; your attention did.

A coach’s questions work the same way.
They help you see choices, patterns, and solutions that were hidden by stress, fear, overwhelm, or habit.

What Professional Coach Training Should Include

Because anyone can call themselves a coach, training matters.

High-quality programs teach:

  • professional competencies
  • ethics
  • communication skills
  • how to structure sessions
  • how to hold clients accountable
  • how to coach without advising or diagnosing

The International Coaching Federation (ICF) is the global gold standard for setting competencies and accrediting training programs. Certification requires both education and supervised practice.

This matters because coaching is an art; and a coach needs more than theories to support someone through real-life challenges.

The Coach - Client Partnership (What You Can Expect)

A strong coaching relationship is built on clarity, trust, and consistency. Coaching works because both the coach and the client bring something essential to the table.

What the Coach Brings

  • Skilled questioning that sharpens awareness
  • Active listening and thoughtful reflection
  • A structured approach to help you move forward
  • Accountability without judgment
  • A calm, steady presence when life feels unsteady

What the Client Brings

  • Openness to explore what’s going on beneath the surface
  • Willingness to take action between sessions
  • Honesty about what is and isn’t working
  • Commitment to their own growth

Coaching isn’t something done to you; it’s something we build with you.
When the partnership is balanced, sessions become a place where you can think clearly, set meaningful goals, and stay aligned with what matters most.

Choosing the Right Coach for You

Here are some simple guidelines that help people make informed decisions:

  1. Start with the “what.”
    What do you want to be different?
    You don’t need a perfect answer, just a direction.
  2. Look for someone with training and experience in the general area you care about.
  3. Review their materials.
    Do they communicate clearly?
    Does their approach feel grounded?
  4. Talk to them.
    Coaching is a relationship.
    The conversation should feel natural and respectful.
  5. Notice the emphasis.
    Do they seem focused on you or on making a sale?
  6. Ask what support looks like.
    Every coach structures sessions differently.
  7. Ask about how you’ll know coaching is done.
    A good coach has an answer to that.
  8. Trust your instincts.
    You’ll know if the connection feels right.

Finding the right coach is less about finding a “perfect expert” and more about finding someone whose presence helps you think clearly and move forward.

What Does Stress Management Coaching Help?

Stress management coaching is a specialty area focused on helping people:

  • understand their stress triggers
  • recognize patterns they didn’t realize they had
  • build healthier responses
  • manage time and responsibilities
  • improve communication
  • shift limiting beliefs
  • prepare for the unexpected
  • align actions with values
  • regain a sense of control
  • reduce emotional reactivity
  • build habits that support a calmer, more intentional life

The transformation is remarkable.
Watching someone move from “everything is happening to me” to “I’m shaping my life again” is one of the most rewarding things I’ve ever witnessed.

This kind of growth takes time—not a few weeks. For some people, it takes months. For others,up to a year, or more. But the changes are real, and they are lasting.

How I Work With Stress Coaching Clients

My process begins with a free Stress Assessment, a simple inventory that helps both of us understand how stress is showing up in your life. It gives us a baseline and highlights which areas may need attention.

From there, we schedule a pre-coaching consultation, where I:

  • learn what you’re struggling with
  • explain how I work
  • answer your questions
  • demonstrate a brief coaching exchange

We use this time to determine whether coaching, specifically coaching with me, is the best fit for your situation.

If we decide to move forward, we review the coaching agreement together and begin scheduling sessions.

What Sessions Look Like

Each session generally includes:

  • reviewing the previous week
  • identifying the current goal or issue
  • exploring the details and patterns at play
  • selecting practical steps for the week ahead

Between sessions, clients track progress and can reach out for support as needed.
Every four weeks, clients also evaluate me, because coaching is a partnership, and accountability goes both ways.

If You’re Curious About Whether Coaching Could Help You

If you’re wondering whether coaching is right for you, or whether stress coaching is the right tool for your situation, the simplest way to find out is to start with the free Stress Assessment.

It’s not a commitment. It’s just a place to begin noticing how stress shows up in your life.

(For more about John, visit About/John. For services, see Services.)

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Mind Body Bridge, LLC

Winterbrook Drive

Cranberry Township, PA 16066