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Posts Tagged ‘Body / Mind’

Profanity’s Role

My friend and colleague, Wendy Watrous Smith, is an attorney in the South Bay who specializes in commercial insolvency and litigation. Over the past several months, we have been discussing how language is used in the legal profession and how that language use impacts who we become as professionals, how we see the world, how we interact with others, and how we impair our our development and creative insights. Wendy decided to take the proverbial “bull by the horns” and join me in writing to the legal industry by contributing to the Daily Journal, the State’s premier daily legal publication. Here is her first column, which was published in the May 4 edition. Profanity is certainly an eye catching opener for beginning a conversation on language. It pertains to us all – lawyers and non-lawyers alike. Thank you, Wendy, for making your voice heard.

I went to a pre-trial settlement conference recently for one of those cases that should have settled long ago. I stepped into the case hoping to resolve it quickly. The local attorney called us into the airless jury room set aside by the court for mediation, and started speaking with the foulest language. This was not just your everyday version of cursing that most of us hear as attorneys, but sounded like something from the “Sopranos.” He wasn’t angry, but was describing his disgust at a particularly difficult party for not making a settlement offer. Keep Reading »

First Regret

Bronnie Ware, author of The Top Five Regrets of the Dying, identifies, as the most common regret of all, “I wish I’d had the courage to live a life true to myself, not the life others expected of me.” Five Regrets. I thought it might be worth our while to drill down this a bit on this regret to see what we can learn.

Now, I must begin with a caveat. In my eight years as a hospice volunteer, I really haven’t heard all that many regrets. I certainly haven’t heard enough of them to accumulate lists, identify patterns, or establish rankings. It may be that so many of our residents have lost cognitive capacity, don’t speak English or, having been “rescued” from the city’s streets or prisons  or other horrific my circumstances, that discussion of regrets is either not possible or not a high priority. Most of my conversations with residents concern the here and now –  the next meal, pain management, the day’s events pertaining to the individual or family,  the evening’s television schedule. Regrets, to the extent that they arise at all,  accompany life review conversations, in which residents attempt to find meaning in what has transpired in their lives. You may recall the hospice story that I previously published about Chloe, who in her final hours, attempted to reconcile her desire to be a good mother with the fact that her sons were forcibly removed from her custody due to the extremes of her schizophrenia. Her regret was specific — she had failed in her maternal expectations. But at life’s end, she was able to alter her perception, eliminate her regret, and find redemption in the fact that surrendering her sons was the “best mothering” of which she was capable in light of her mental illness. Keep Reading »

Blessings of Age

I sat with a young colleague the other evening who was bemoaning his fate as he crossed into his mid forties. He couldn’t carouse as he used to. He was losing muscle mass and stamina. His hairline was receding. Some of the early ticks of memory were beginning to show. He wasn’t sure how he could keep up with his youthful expectations at the rate of decline that he was experiencing. He turned to me and asked, “How do you continue to do it at your age?”

I was glad that he asked. This is what I told him:

I can’t tell you what a blessing it is to mature! I get up every morning with gratitude for the fact that I am still here. I love and am loved by my family and a few friends. I am privileged to do work that I love. I am not pursuing anything that is not consistent with my constantly evolving sense of my life’s purpose. I continue to evolve the manner in which I practice law to bring a more refined and subtle integrity to what I do, serving my clients while creating the most abundant outcomes for all parties involved. Keep Reading »

Crowdsourcing For Revelation

On February 10, 2012, Nancy and I met with about ten volunteers from the Peninsula Humane Society at the end of the day to discuss our book,  #DOG Tweet – 140 Perspectives On What Our Dogs Teach Us About Being Human. The volunteers care for and train surrendered dogs and other animals, preparing them for adoption. We had gathered to engage in what I had imagined to be a “crowdsourcing” event, designed to test the approach and validity of our book’s content. Crowdsourcing, according to Wikipedia, “is a problem-solving and production process that involves outsourcing tasks to a network of people, also known as the crowd.” Whether or not we fit the evolving definition of crowdsourcing, we hoped to bring people together to share their perspectives on what makes these dog/human relationships so special. This was to be more than “brainstorming” as we did not wish our colleagues to limit their perspectives to the cognitive domain. We wanted to hear about the emotional, somatic, social and even spiritual contributions dogs made to the lives of others. We wanted to know how those contributions might enable us to improve ourselves and our relationships with others, and human and nonhuman alike. And we were not disappointed. Here are some of the thoughts that arose out of our conversation. Keep Reading »

Awareness and Parenting, Part 8 – Integral Intelligence & Wrap Up

Integral Intelligence (II) refers to that state of being in which you are concurrently aware of and able to utilize your other intelligences synergistically. Moreover, II allows you to overcome the compartmentalization, limitations and distortion which may arise from allowing one intelligence or another to dominate from time to time or in certain situations. Here are some simple examples. You may not function well intellectually, emotionally or socially when you are hungry or verging on illness. An astute somatic awareness will alert you to the risks of certain undertakings, such that you either proceed with caution or postpone them to another day. Or, you recently have experienced a death in the family and are grieving your loss. You recognize that your emotional state will impede your somatic intelligence, so this is not the time to go rock climbing. You choose to go for a hike, instead. Or, you’ve worked for twelve days straight, without a break, and are invited to an evening of socializing with friends. You recognize that you lack the physical energy as well as the mental acuity to effectively engage a social situation. So, instead, you take your partner out for a quiet meal. The permutations are limitless. But the higher functioning to be realized from acknowledging the interdependencies of the various intelligences and working with them integrally cannot be overlooked. II is an intelligence not much recognized beyond a small circle of psychologists, philosophers, educators and coaches. It is not been the subject of protracted study, although various authors such as Ken Wilber,  Ervin Laszlo, Peter Senge, Robert Sternberg, and others have been building a framework for its definition and wider acceptance. Many have  begun to equate effective leadership with high II, all though I know of no metric for its measurement that  been established. Keep Reading »

Awareness and Parenting, Part 6 – Social

Social intelligence refers to your competency to successfully engage others, leading to mutually satisfying relationships. It includes the ability to listen deeply and communicate profoundly with widely diverse individuals and groups. It involves seeing the world from others’ perspectives, the ability to collaborate on problems and co-create outcomes, as well as the ability to effectively compromise, allowing your desires to be subsumed for the benefit of the relationship, all without sacrificing your worth or dignity. Social intelligence generally is not a fixed attribute. Rather, it is an ever evolving complex of information processing skills, which can be modified to alter attitudes and behavior. Social intelligence should not be conflated with social skills, which constitute only a subset.

According to Daniel Goleman, in Social Intelligence: The Revolutionary New Science of Human Relationships, parent-child responsiveness creates the path for parents to help their children “learn the ground rules for relationships — how to attend to another person, how to pace an interaction, how to engage in conversation, how to tune in to the other person’s feelings, and how to manage your own feelings while you are engaged with someone else.” These rules form the foundation for competent social living. According to Goleman, children lacking synchronous parenting are at risk of growing up with disturbed attachment patterns. Children raised by attuned parents tend to be secure; while anxious parenting yields anxious children and aloof parenting produces avoidant children. The attachment style of a parent predicts the child’s social style with about 70% accuracy. Keep Reading »

Awareness and Parenting, Part 5 – Somatic

Somatic intelligence refers to your ability to observe what is happening in your body.  Furthermore, it includes your ability to include what your body is telling you into your understanding of what is happening in the moment and how best to respond to it. This intelligence may reveal something very different about what’s happening (alternative perceptions) and appropriate responses to them than either your intellect or your emotions. By the end of this conversation, I hope you come to see how important this intelligence is in contributing to your parenting efforts.

I want to separate out somatic intelligence from certain human habits or manifestations, which may appear to reflect somatic intelligence but do not. First, there are those who are impeccably dressed and coiffed, based on an understanding that appearance creates a favorable impression on others. This may be accompanied by practiced body movements, voice training and demeanor reinforcing that initial impression. Second are the bodybuilders whose every muscle has been driven, with or without chemical assistance, to optimal massing. Third are the indefatigable trainees, ceaselessly running, biking, swimming, climbing, rowing and so on.  If you’ll note, each of the above  seeks to develop the body for some particular manifestation or outcome. That may, or may not, include understanding of body, its  temperament,well-being and status for their own sakes. I was once coaching an individual who ran long distances on a regular basis, but used the running time to “solve” work and personal problems.  I asked him whether or not he occasionally fell owing to the distraction of his problem-solving. He admitted, with some embarrassment, that he frequently did, tripping over objects, changes in elevation or his own feet. His body was on autopilot and clearly not the subject of awareness. Keep Reading »

Awareness and Parenting, Part 4 – Emotional

What emotional states are you bringing to your parenting? Another way of asking the same question is: “Who is showing up to parent?” Let’s review the answer to this question from three temporal contexts. First, what is the background emotional tone of your life? You can find it embedded in your narrative – the story you tell yourself about yourself. Do you see the world generally as a hostile place from which you constantly seek safety? Are the causes of bad things that happen to you permanent -  they always will be there, affecting your life?

According to  positive psychologist, Martin Seligman, author of Authentic Happiness, “If you think about bad things in terms of  ‘always’ and ‘never’ and abiding traits, you have a permanent, pessimistic style.” When good things happen, pessimists see the cause as transient, resulting from specific factors or circumstances. Quite the opposite, when optimists suffer a setback, they see it as temporary. On the other hand, to optimists, good events are attributable to permanent  causes, such as  personal traits and abilities. Remember that your narrative consists of beliefs. Your beliefs may or may not rest on fact. But one thing is true -  how you see the world will affect how you bring the world to your child. In Seligman’s view, your narrative’s outlook determines whether or not you will be able to maintain hope.  As Seligman elaborates,“People who make permanent and universal explanations for good events, as well as temporary and specific explanations for bad events, bounce back from troubles briskly and get on a roll easily when they succeed  wants. People who make temporary and specific explanations for success, and permanent and universal explanations for setbacks, tend to collapse under pressure — both for a long time and across situations — and rarely get on a roll.” Imagine, for the moment, the consequences of parenting without hope. Keep Reading »

Awareness and Parenting, Part 2, Big Picture

I left the last post with the observation, “Become aware of who you are, because ‘who you are’ is what you give to your child.”

There was a time when I used to “bet” my wife, Nancy, when we used to accompany our children to various “kid parties,” like birthdays, school events and the like, that I could spot the children of lawyers, simply by the way they conducted themselves. I was a bit full of myself then and, in the last decade or so, I have been taught quite a bit about the complexity of our species and its behaviors. But I did experience some rather uncanny results. Nancy was the primary caregiver, so I didn’t know many of the children. But, at  any particular gathering, I might spot some engaged child, focus on him/her for a few minutes, declare my conclusion to Nancy, that this child was parented by a lawyer, and voilĂ , my conclusion would be confirmed. This wasn’t as insightful as you may think. Many of the parents at our children’ a school were lawyers.  Certainly not all, or even a vast majority. But I would guess that of all parenting couples, probably 20 to 25% had one parent in the legal profession.  So what was it that I was seeing that led me to these conclusions? And, what difference did it make that I could make such an assessment? Keep Reading »

Opening Up Through Travel

Nancy and I headed off to Barcelona, Spain on October 18, 2011. We then traveled throughout Morocco, returning home, via Paris, on November 3. This, and a few subsequent posts, were written on planes, in trains and hotel rooms, lobbies, restaurants and parks, during our travels. I am happy to be home but grateful for the insights gained from my travels.

Foreign travel always sharpens my senses.  As of this writing, Nancy and I just departed Casablanca on the Atlantic Coast, headed east to the historic city of Fez, the spiritual capital of Morocco.  A gentleman, who married an American from Atlanta and lives in Fez, and who is sharing our train car, also explained that Fez is the country’s donkey cart capital.  The streets inside the medina (the ancient City, housing millions of inhabitants, inside the ramparts) are so small and the foot traffic too great for motor vehicles. [The cry of "Balak," is your  warning that a donkey is approaching and you had better move to avoid injury.] Fez is a city that retains most of the great Moroccan traditions, including textile and leather manufacturing and craft production. Keep Reading »

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