
**CCEU's are pending approval**
What if mindset isn’t the first step in coaching transformation?
Neuroscience shows that before clients can think differently, they must first feel safe. When fear or stress take over, the brain’s survival response limits reflection, creativity, and goal-directed action. In this engaging, research-based session, Rosa explores how psychological safety reactivates the brain for growth—helping clients move from reactivity to possibility.
Learning Objectives
- Understand the brain’s response to stress, fear, and psychological safety.
- Use presence, tone, and language to signal safety and build trust.
- Apply science-backed tools to unlock insight and support client growth and goal achievement.
Key Takeaways
- Safety precedes change: without it, the brain’s higher functions go offline.
- Coach regulation matters: presence and attunement create trust.
- Small, safe shifts lead to big growth: safety fuels curiosity, courage, and lasting transformation.
About the Speaker
Rosa Edinga, PCC, CEC, MBA
Rosa Edinga believes in the magic that happens when people feel safe enough to show up fully. A coach, mentor, and educator, she supports leaders and coaches to reconnect with themselves so they can lead in ways that feel honest, human, and courageous.
She creates spaces where people can take a breath, say the hard things out loud, and reconnect with their own steadiness, their values, and what matters most.
Her work sits at the intersection of neuroscience, coaching, and humanity, exploring how nervous system regulation, identity, and psychological safety shape how we show up— for ourselves and for others. Rosa brings a trauma-informed lens to both leadership and coach development, helping people grow in ways that feel grounded, not forced. Because before growth, there needs to be safety.