Many people step into coaching believing they’re open-minded. And in some ways, maybe they are. They’re curious, they want change, and they’re ready to explore new possibilities. But open-mindedness in coaching requires much more than being accepting of other people’s ideas. It also demands a deeper, more personal kind of openness: the willingness to see yourself differently, to question long-held beliefs, and to reconsider the stories you’ve been living by.
True open-mindedness isn’t just about being tolerant or non-judgemental; it’s about being brave enough to explore the parts of yourself you usually avoid. And this is where coaching becomes powerful. When you begin to approach your own thoughts, fears, and patterns with genuine curiosity rather than defence, coaching moves from surface-level insight to meaningful, lasting change.
Where It All Begins…
Most people arrive at coaching believing they’re open-minded. After all, they’re seeking change, they’re curious, and they’ve chosen to work with someone who will challenge their thinking. That sounds like open-mindedness, but there’s a subtle truth here: The moment we believe we’re already open-minded, we often stop noticing the ways we aren’t.
Open-mindedness isn’t a trait you either possess or don’t. It’s a practice — a willingness to expand, stretch, question, listen, reconsider, and sometimes sit with hard, uncomfortable truths before they soften into growth — and nowhere is this more important than in coaching.
Because coaching doesn’t only ask you to be open-minded about new strategies or new perspectives. It gently nudges you toward a deeper kind of openness:
Are you open to seeing yourself differently?
How open are you to challenging beliefs you’ve carried for years?
Do you feel open to discovering parts of yourself you’ve ignored, minimised, or judged?
Are you open to changing… not just your situation, but your story?
In this article, we’ll explore the difference between being “generally open-minded” and being genuinely open in the coaching relationship, and why it matters for meaningful, lasting transformation.
The Illusion of Being Open-Minded
We often think of open-mindedness as a social quality: being non-judgemental, fair, curious, empathetic — especially toward others. But self-open-mindedness is something entirely different.
People frequently come into coaching saying things like:
- “I’m happy to explore anything,”
- “I’m open to change,”
- “I don’t mind being challenged,”
- “I’m ready to do the work.”
And they usually mean it.
Yet, very early in coaching, something interesting tends to happen. The conversation bumps up against a belief, identity, fear, or pattern that has been part of their life for years (and sometimes decades) and suddenly that open-mindedness shrinks. It’s not resistance; it’s protection and we all do it.
Open-mindedness doesn’t disappear because someone is closed or stubborn. It contracts because the brain is wired to keep us safe. Challenging long-held assumptions can feel like stepping into unknown territory. This is why coaching requires a second kind of open-mindedness — one that is directed inwards.
Being Open-Minded Toward Others vs. Toward Yourself
Many people who consider themselves open-minded are wonderfully accepting of other people:
- They value diversity of thought.
- They appreciate different backgrounds and perspectives.
- They’re supportive, compassionate, and tolerant.
- They don’t judge others harshly.
However, when the mirror turns, things get harder. The same person who says, “I’m very open-minded,” may:
- Dismiss their own needs as inconvenient.
- Reject praise or strengths with discomfort.
- Shut down when asked a question that touches a tender area.
- Resist slowing down long enough to feel what’s really going on.
- Hold onto labels that no longer serve them.
- Hide parts of themselves they worry are “too much” or “not enough.”
Why? Because being open-minded toward yourself asks for something deeper:
Self-compassion.
Self-honesty.
And a willingness to loosen your grip on the identity you’ve built.
That can feel exposing — which is exactly why coaching provides a safe, structured container for the work.
What Open-Mindedness Looks Like in Coaching (And What It Doesn’t)
What it does look like:
✔ Being curious about your own reactions
✔ Entertaining the possibility that your long-held belief may not be the whole story
✔ Sitting with a question even when it feels uncomfortable
✔ Being willing to explore both the “I want” and the “I’m afraid.”
✔ Welcoming challenge as care, not criticism
✔ Allowing new ways of seeing yourself to emerge gradually
✔ Acknowledging that you don’t have to know everything right now
What it doesn’t look like:
✘ Expecting coaching to confirm what you already think
✘ Wanting new outcomes without new behaviours
✘ Recognising patterns in others but not in yourself
✘ Becoming defensive when a belief is gently examined
✘ Seeking change while clinging tightly to old narratives
✘ Seeing self-exploration as a threat rather than an opportunity
None of these “doesn’t” items makes someone a bad client. They make someone a human client.
The role of coaching isn’t to shame you out of these patterns — it’s to notice them with you and help you find your way through.
The Moment Coaching Starts to Work
There’s usually a turning point in coaching. Often, it’s not dramatic or loud. In fact, it often happens when someone says something like:
“I’ve never thought of it that way before.”
Or:
“That’s uncomfortable to admit, but it might be true.”
Or:
“Part of me wants this, but another part is scared to let go of the old version of me.”
This is open-mindedness in action: It’s that willingness to widen the lens, even by a few millimetres, and see what else might be possible.
When clients reach this point, the work deepens. New choices emerge, old patterns start to loosen, and insights land not just in the mind, but in the body. The shift doesn’t require perfection — only sincerity and willingness.
Why Self-Acceptance Is a Prerequisite for Open-Mindedness
It’s almost impossible to be open-minded about yourself if you’re still busy judging yourself.
People who struggle to accept themselves often unconsciously create “rules” about who they’re allowed to be, how they should behave, or what they’re permitted to want:
- “I don’t think I should need help.”
- “Surely I should be further along by now.”
- “Why can’t I cope as well as I know I should.”
- “I shouldn’t think like that.”
- “Well, I can’t change; this is just who I am.”
These beliefs shrink the space for growth and they clip the wings of open-mindedness.
Coaching reintroduces the idea that:
You can be a work in progress and still be worthy.
It’s OK to hold contradictions.
You can evolve.
You can outgrow labels and still honour the version of you who needed them.
Self-acceptance doesn’t mean complacency; it creates the psychological safety necessary for honest exploration and deep change.
What Makes Coaching Effective: The Three Layers of Openness
For coaching to be truly effective, three kinds of openness need to be present:
1. Openness to the coach
Trusting the process enough to explore new pathways of thinking.
2. Openness to possibility
Allowing for the idea that your future is not determined by your past.
3. Openness to yourself
This is the hardest layer — seeing yourself with honesty and compassion.
Remember: Lasting transformation comes from honest openness – to your coach, to new possibilities and, most importantly, to truly seeing yourself. The more you practise this, the more powerful your coaching experience will be.
You don’t need to master all three at the start. You just need to be willing to explore them.
A Question to Leave With You
If you’re considering coaching — or already in it — gently ask yourself:
“Where am I truly open-minded, and where am I only willing to be open if the answers feel comfortable?”
This question isn’t a criticism. It’s just an invitation, and it’s a doorway to deeper self-discovery.
Open-mindedness is not about being endlessly agreeable or positive. It’s about being brave enough to look inward with curiosity rather than judgment… and allowing the possibility that a different version of you is waiting to emerge.
If you’re curious about how open-mindedness could transform the next stage of your life, I’d love to explore it with you. You can learn more about my values-based coaching programmes or book a no-pressure discovery call to see whether coaching feels like the right next step.
