Rm Opens Up About Leadership Pressure In Bts: ‘i Sometimes Put Too Much Weight On Myself’

RM shares the pressure of leading BTS while still feeling like one of the group, offering a rare look into how he balances responsibility and identity.

March 21, 2026
RM

BTS is back with its first full group album in six years, and with that return comes a renewed spotlight on leadership, longevity, and the internal structure that has held the group together for over a decade.

Speaking on The Zane Lowe Show on Apple Music, RM reflected on what it means to lead a group that has grown from a developing act into a global institution. His framing was less about authority and more about balance, describing BTS not as a hierarchy but as a system built on shared responsibility. Having spent roughly half their lives together, RM positioned the group as something closer to a family, where support is often unspoken and roles shift depending on who needs to step forward at any given moment.

That dynamic becomes more important as expectations scale. The release of ARIRANG marks not just a comeback, but a reset point following military service, solo careers, and a prolonged absence as a full unit. The pressure attached to that return extends beyond the music itself, placing additional weight on leadership at a time when the group is re-establishing its identity in a new phase of its career.

RM acknowledged that tension directly, pointing to the challenge of carrying responsibility while still remaining part of the collective. His perspective reflects a leadership style that is still evolving, one that requires stepping back as much as stepping forward. The idea of being both the leader and simply one of seven members is central to how BTS continues to operate, particularly as the group navigates a moment where expectations are both global and immediate.

That pressure has already surfaced in practical ways. Just ahead of the group’s comeback performance in Seoul, RM sustained an ankle injury that forced adjustments to his role on stage. Even with those limitations, the emphasis remained on delivering the performance, underscoring how tightly execution and expectation are tied together at this level.

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The broader conversation among the group also touched on longevity, a topic that carries more weight for BTS than most acts. Jin framed it in simple terms, acknowledging that nothing lasts indefinitely while emphasizing the importance of extending the moments that do. Suga took a more optimistic view, suggesting that the group’s future is less about external timelines and more about internal willingness to continue.

What emerges from the conversation is a group that understands both its scale and its limits. BTS is operating at a level where leadership is not just about direction, but about managing expectation, preserving chemistry, and sustaining momentum over time. RM’s role sits at the center of that balance, but the structure itself remains collective — which may be the reason it has held together this long. For a deeper look at how that momentum translated into numbers, see how ARIRANG performed on Spotify on release day.

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