
Posts Tagged ‘Authenticity’
THE BENEFITS OF PRESENCE AND HOW TO STAY PRESENT
Saturday, June 19th, 2010THE BENEFITS OF SELF-COMPASSION FOR THERAPEUTIC LAWYERS WHO SEEK TO BE PEACEMAKERS AND HEALERS
Friday, May 14th, 2010Understanding the Role of Lawyers as Peacemakers and Healers
Towards the end of the 20th century we crossed a conceptual threshold in understanding the impact of law on people. The traditional view was to see law as a set of agreed upon rules to be administered by a neutral authority through rational procedures and applied evenhandedly (without favoring or disfavoring people on account of their race, national origin, religion, gender, age, financial status or disability status). In the traditional view the legal system required adversarial hearings or trials to decide disputes the parties could not resolve on their own. No real consideration was given to whether these purely adversarial proceedings met the emotional and psychological needs of the parties or how they affected the mental health of the parties. Unfortunately the adversarial system had largely negative therapeutic effects on litigants by heightening conflict and aggravating their underlying animosity toward one another.
During the 1990s a number of lawyers began speaking about cooperative justice, holistic law, collaborative justice, restorative justice and therapeutic justice. Cooperative justice was focused on bringing a peaceful spirit and a sincere willingness to settle disputes into what had been a purely adversarial system. The key insight of holistic law was that law affects not just an individual’s property rights or freedoms (such as the freedoms to work, express oneself or visit one’s children), but the whole person, and by extension the whole of society. That’s because how people are treated by the legal system affects their attitudes toward government, toward authority, toward the prevailing culture, toward social groups within society and even toward themselves.
In the 1990s progressive lawyers propagated the view that law is a social force which impacts the emotional life and psychological wellbeing of all the people who participate in or who are bound by the results of legal proceedings. Practitioners using the new justice models sought to go beyond settling cases. They wanted users of the legal system to wind up with positive rather than negative therapeutic consequences. In this view resolution of a legal dispute would be successful if the parties actually forgave each other for past harm, if they cleared up a serious misunderstanding to see the legitimacy of each other’s point of view or worked through an underlying grievance to restore a shattered relationship. This new approach attracted lawyers who wanted to be peacemakers and healers rather than gladiators. It provided an exciting new role for lawyers.
The Emotional Obstacles Facing Lawyers Who Would be Peacemakers and Healers
The project of making peace between people locked in a legal struggle, and of healing the rift between them, isn’t an easy one. It’s not as if you’re always dealing with perfectly rational, easy going and pleasant people. Often at least one of the parties proves to be a difficult person. Who are difficult people? Some of them make us feel frustrated, upset or angry. Some leave us confused, perplexed or even incredulous. Some fill us with guilt, shame, sadness, hopelessness or despair. They are the people who give us a bumpy emotional ride and tire us out. They test our patience, our compassion, our faith and our persistence.
When trial lawyers deal with difficult litigants in an adversary system they do not undertake the responsibility or the challenge of getting them to make peace. They conduct discovery, perform at a hearing or trial and then it’s over. When you’re a lawyer acting as peacemaker or healer, it’s different. You’re attempting to get two or more people at war to stop quarreling, sit quietly, really listen to each other and take the risk of changing their attitudes and behaviors toward each other for the sake of really making peace and moving on with their lives. Not easy, huh?
Let’s face it. None of us can get another person to feel what we feel, think what we think, value what we value or do what we want them to do. All we can do is encourage them to stop insisting they’re right and everybody else is wrong, to move from the narrowed vision of hate or self-pity to consider alternative viewpoints, to see how staying engaged in conflict may be more harmful than helpful and to open up to the possibility that change may be beneficial. When you’re trying to do this with truly difficult people who are good at pushing other people’s buttons, don’t be surprised if you get your buttons pushed. Don’t be surprised if you start taking sides and getting sucked into the conflict. Don’t be surprised if you get upset and lose it when you meant to stay cool. Don’t be surprised if carry your experiences with these difficult people around in your head, and annoy your family members and friends by rehashing them over meals or during moments of leisure.
There’s an old saying that no good deed goes unpunished. The challenge of making true and lasting peace between difficult people is that it can generate feelings of discouragement from unsuccessful effort. On the purely adversarial side of law you get a chance to go into the ring and prove the other side wrong – to show they were at fault, that they lied or that they hurt an innocent person and deserve to pay a judgment or go to jail over their protestations of innocence. Even if you lose you have the satisfaction of not holding back, taking your best shot and venting your anger. You can also blame someone else like the judge or jury if you lose, because it’s the judge or jury which decides the outcome. The case ends with the outcome. You don’t stay in touch with your client or the opposed party to find out how they were affected by the proceedings or the result.
When your goal is not to win a verdict but to make peace between difficult people you must show patience, tolerance and restraint. If you fail to make peace between difficult people and heal their wounds, there is no judge or jury to blame. You’re likely to blame yourself and make yourself feel bad. When this happens enough times you may actually compromise your ability to function as a therapeutic lawyer. Why? It could be that fatigue or burnout sets in. It could be doubt – doubting your competence to get warring parties to inwardly settle their differences where it counts, in their hearts. You may even come to doubt the wisdom of the whole enterprise of therapeutic law. The most effective way to avoid this sort of burnout and keep renewing your energy, vitality and health as a therapeutic lawyer is by using self-compassion.
What is Self-Compassion and How Can We Use it to Help Ourselves?
According to Christopher K. Germer, Ph.D., author of the mindful path to self-compassion: Freeing Yourself from Destructive Thoughts and Emotions, self-compassion is being truly kind to oneself when one is suffering from the emotional pain of living. All of us have desires, hopes and fantasies of how our lives will turn out. All of us have dashed expectations. When reality frustrates or disappoints us, we feel emotional pain and our self-image (our story of who we’re meant to be) takes a hit. If we had self-compassion, we would acknowledge rather than deny our emotional pain, we would not judge ourselves to be bad people for having negative emotions and we would try to soothe our own suffering by wishing ourselves well.
Let’s say you’ve made a mistake or failed at achieving a goal in your practice of therapeutic law. You’re feeling bad and you have an urge to start verbally beating up on yourself. The first step of self-compassion is mindfulness. No matter how much love you hold in your heart you won’t be able to give yourself that love and soothe your own pain if you find emotional pain unbearable and if you always react to it by resisting it or trying to escape it. Dr. Germer says it’s crucial to turn toward your pain, embrace it and allow yourself to really feel it.
Now you’re in position to give yourself the love you hold in your heart. Dr. Germer describes step two as befriending, holding and comforting oneself as the person who is in pain with all of the good will you can muster. Dr. Germer says that self-compassion soothes the troubled mind like a loving friend who listens to our troubles and travails without judgment.
Unfortunately, says Dr. Germer, most people can’t maintain good will toward themselves when things don’t go their way. They are extremely uncomfortable when they experience negative feelings (such as frustration, anger, disappointment or sadness) and they react by fighting or fleeing them. To fight a negative feeling is to blame and argue with the person you judge responsible for your problem, be it yourself or someone else. To flee is to deny the feeling, pretend everything is okay and not deal with the feeling.
When people resist emotional pain they end up stuck in their pain and it just gets worse. The internal struggle to resist emotional pain ends up harming their psyches, their bodies and even their relationships by making them self-absorbed and isolated. Some people have a tendency to self-blame and self-criticize when things don’t go well. Some people are more likely to blame others and verbally attack them when feeling emotional pain. Neither approach eases the pain of the person who is suffering. Self-blame brings depression. Blaming others causes social friction, alienation and isolation.
Most lawyers were raised by parents who expected them to excel and so they are ultra-sensitive to shame when they don’t shine at what they do. Most lawyers are highly conscientious people with exacting standards of performance, ethics and loyalty to their clients. When, for whatever reason, they fail to come through for their clients, their law firm or their family, lawyers tend to engage in harsh self-blame. The typical lawyer’s mental toolkit does not include the ability to be soft, flexible, kindly or forgiving toward oneself when one hasn’t met one’s expectations.
Dr. Germer says that self-criticism is a way of side-stepping emotional pain which increases instead of lightens your burden. Think of a time when you warned your child not to light a match, not to touch a knife or not to run in a slippery place, but he did it anyway and ended up sobbing with tears streaming down his face. At that moment were you compassionate? Were you able to put aside the fact that he didn’t abide your warning and console him – or did you get angry and use harsh words of blame and accusation, only to feel like an insensitive jerk later on?
Self-compassion is choosing not to berate yourself when the blaming part of your mind thinks you deserve it. Dr. Germer recommends that when we believe we have screwed up that we say to ourselves, “May I forgive myself. May I learn from this mistake.” All people have an innate wish to be happy and free from suffering. All people experience emotional pain. Both are universal aspects of human existence. According to Dr. Germer, when we meet our own suffering with self-compassion we connect with all humanity, we get in touch with everyone else’s pain, we get in touch with everyone else’s wish to be happy and free of suffering, and we re-enforce our own wish to be happy and free from suffering.
Dr. Germer says the key to effective use of self-compassion is being kind to yourself because you’re suffering rather than doing so to feel better. There’s a difference between cure and care. Cure aims to fix a person’s problem which can be impossible. Care is accepting that a problem exists and being kind to the person because he’s suffering. When you’re hurting because your peacemaking work is difficult and you haven’t met with much success lately, don’t challenge your negative thoughts. Don’t tell yourself “Stop whining. Get back up on the horse you sissy. You can do this if you just work harder and keep trying.” When you deny your emotional pain it only gets stronger. “It goes into the basement and lifts weights.” Instead, turn toward your negative thoughts and feelings with open eyes and an open heart with non-judgmental awareness and compassion, and you will get relief.
Self-Compassion is the Foundation for Having Compassion for Others
To be good at making peace between and healing the damaged relationships of others it’s crucial to be empathic (able to feel their pain) and compassionate (wishing them to be free of suffering). As I’ve already stated, when you practice therapeutic law your compassion for others will be tested and challenged and that’s why self-compassion will help you hang in there when the going gets tough. Self-compassion boosts your compassion for others. Indeed without self-compassion it’s not possible to have compassion for others.
Imagine being kind to someone when that person is very angry and being highly unpleasant toward you. Meeting anger with kindness is disarming and effective. The angry person does not expect it, he can’t fuel his anger with your kindness and your kindness is just what he needs (even if it’s not what his angry brain wants). How can self-compassion help you pull this off?
Every lawyer has his warts. For some it’s a fear of public speaking. For some it’s being disorganized with paperwork. For some it’s utter incompetence with technology. For others it’s losing one’s temper and becoming abusive. Dr. Germer encourages us to accept ourselves warts and all. This means owning your problems fully and completely, whatever they may be. Once we fully acknowledge our difficulties with true compassion, says Dr. Germer, we can then feel better about ourselves and make our lives easier. We actually begin to accept and like the person we already are.
Suffering is not a flaw to be ashamed of, but part of the human condition. The more humble and loving you can be to yourself, despite your flaws, the warmer and more accepting you will be toward others. If you regularly treat yourself with kindness when you make a mistake, it’s much easier to be sympathetic toward people who cause you pain. A person who leads a life of self-kindness is better able to help others in a spirit of “relaxed persistence.” He’s less likely to disconnect and head for the hills emotionally when the people he’s trying to help display negative emotions. Dr. Germer says it’s necessary to have self-compassion to be kind to others, and anyone who says that caring for oneself is selfish is propagating a myth.
If all a lawyer cares about is making money, he’ll be pleased when he wins a case and makes a fat fee and displeased when he loses and goes home with empty pockets. But he won’t lose any sleep worrying about how his client or the opposed party feel. It’s harder when you aim to assist the parties heal their inter-personal conflicts, let go of their anger and feel better.
You empower yourself to do this work well when you stop being a big self-critic. Self-critics cause themselves so much pain they can’t open up their hearts to the suffering of others. Since they perceive and treat themselves harshly that’s how they perceive and treat others. Self-critics come in all shapes and sizes. You can be a very idealistic person who truly desires to help others and still be a self-critic. If I’m hurting, I can only take care of you once I’ve attended adequately to my own pain – much like the adult who has to use the oxygen mask first when airplane cabin pressure drops so he can assist the child next to him. According to Dr. Germer, as I deepen my awareness of my own negative feelings and improve my own ability to sit with them, tolerate them and accept them, the more able I am to do this with your negative feelings.
So when you’re trying without success to make peace between very difficult people, don’t throw in the towel when you begin experiencing frustration and anger. Dr. Germer says that transforming such relationships “begins with us. It’s an inside job.” By that he means using inner kindness. Say to yourself, “Just as I want to be happy and free from suffering, so does ___________.”
Practices to Develop Your Self-Compassion
In his book Dr. Germer sets forth five basic methods of developing self-compassion. I will discuss each one below.
(1) Seated meditation using the allow, soften, and love approach. During meditation you start out by breathing slowly and mindfully, mentally locating the discomfort in your body from tension due to stress. Allow that physical discomfort to exist rather than compounding it by trying to wish it away. Next you mentally soften into the tight muscles, allowing them to go soft as you repeat “soft, soft, soft.” Finally, you bring the emotion of love to yourself. Think of your body as the body of a beloved child. Direct love to the part of your body that is tight and uncomfortable from holding stress there. Say “love, love, love.” If negative thoughts come up during the meditation (such as “I stink at therapeutic law. I might as well go back to corporate tax.”) just let them go. Don’t fight them. Just let them drift away like clouds as you quietly repeat “allow, soften, love.” The effect of this approach is to release bodily tension and discomfort and let energy flow freely through your body. Dr. Germer says that if you tense up during a legal proceeding you can intentionally allow your belly and/or your breathe to soften.
(2) Seated or walking meditation with metta. Metta is a word from Pali, the ancient language of India in which Buddha’s sermons were translated in the first century B.C. It translates as “lovingkindness.” To act with metta is to act with “kindness, good will and benevolence.” A metta meditation practice is one aimed at developing “universal, unselfish, all embracing love.” The Buddha spoke mainly of metta in relation to others. The first Buddhist master to speak in depth about directing metta toward oneself was the 5th century Buddhist monk Buddhaghosa. He taught that practicing self-kindness enables us to recognize and identify with the wish that all beings have to be happy and free of suffering.
It’s only when we are kindly disposed towards ourselves that we can take actions to promote the welfare of others, which would include practicing therapeutic law. The Native Americans said that each person had two wolves in his heart, a wolf of love and a wolf of hate, and how each person felt and acted towards others depended on which wolf he fed each day. Thus practicing metta during meditation requires that you wish happiness for yourself. But this is not narcissistic. Your objective is not to be happy at anyone else’s expense; nor is metta for oneself divorced from concern for others. Dr. Germer says metta is not a pity party (which would involve loads of complaining, whining and wallowing in self-pity), nor is it a set of shallow self-affirmations (such as saying “I’m getting stronger, richer and better looking every day when you still feel awful inside”).
Metta practice is focused on the intention of being happy and free from suffering, not the outcome. No one can control external circumstances or guarantee one’s future happiness. In every life there will be change, disappointment, loss and suffering. Metta practice is focused on being a constant, loving companion to oneself. Dr. Germer says the time we most need metta for ourselves is when we feel the worst. However, elsewhere he says that you can build up a reserve of lovingkindness by doing metta meditation everyday. The key phrase to repeat over and over is “May I be safe. May I be happy. May I be healthy. May I live with ease.”
When you have built up a good store of self-kindness you will act with loving attention to yourself when you experience emotional pain. People who are self-critical and lack self-kindness engage in what Dr. Germer calls “anxious attention” when they experience negative emotions. They tend to go into fight-flight and either become overwhelmed and depressed or they get panicked and seek comfort in substances.
Once you have built up a good reserve of metta for yourself, Dr. Germer encourages people to branch out. He suggests a sequence in which you start out wishing safety, happiness, health and ease to someone you love so much that envisioning their face brings a broad smile to your face. Later you try wishing these good things to a person you like. Next to a neutral person that you neither like nor dislike. Then to a person you dislike or who makes your life difficult. Then to all beings.
After reading Dr. Germer’s book I added about ten minutes of metta practice to my own daily meditation routine. I found the results to be remarkable. It increased my level of self-acceptance and healthy (non-narcissistic) self-love. It increased my sensitivity to the emotional suffering of others and my wish for others to be happy and free from suffering. I found myself less reactive to others when they said or did things that caused me irritation, annoyance, disappointment or some form of emotional pain. Following Dr. Germer’s advice I wished such folks safety, happiness, health, and ease, and this not only eased my discomfort but enabled me to sustain good relationships with these people instead of pulling away in anger.
(3) Noting and labeling negative emotions. Buddhist meditators call the constant chatter in their heads “monkey mind.” Cognitive neuroscientists estimate that we have somewhere between 40,000 to 60,000 thoughts a day. Many of these are random and lie at the fringes of conscious awareness. Some of these thoughts are intrusive and obsessive and we wind up ruminating over them instead of being mentally present for our lives. It’s hard to listen to your client, opposing counsel or the opposing party and be compassionate if your head is filled with such distracting chatter.
When you sit down to meditate and you become silent and calm, it becomes possible to hear your thoughts. Some are memories of the past which may be pleasant, disturbing or neutral. These can be simple scenes or complex “mini-movies.” If you had an argument with someone earlier that day you might replay it, evaluate what happened and form judgments about who was right/good and who was wrong/bad. This could trigger feelings of hurt and anger or of shame, regret and the desire to apologize.
Some of your mental noise is anxious anticipation of an event that has not yet occurred. Perhaps your boss has asked you to see him in the afternoon but he hasn’t told you why. Perhaps you’ve asked your teenager to meet with you in the evening for a discussion about homework and grades, sex, drugs or some other loaded topic. Thinking about your meetings to come with your boss or your teenager can trigger feelings. Perhaps thinking about them makes you feel jittery, nervous, tense and anxious. If your mind hasn’t been focused at the office due to a family crisis and you’ve let your work slip, you might start beating up on yourself and call yourself a bad employee or a disloyal employee as you walk toward your boss’s suite. Let’s say you work really long hours and you feel disconnected from your teen. You’re genuinely confused about what to tell him. This might trigger feelings of loneliness, insecurity about your parenting or self-defensive criticism of your teen as being ungrateful for your sacrifices and someone who is too lazy to meet his real potential at school.
Buddhist meditators use different techniques to cleanse and clear their minds of all this mental noise. One approach is to sit quietly in a state of equanimity and invest no emotional attachment to such thoughts, judgments or feelings so they arise, float by like clouds and pass out of your screen of awareness. Another approach is to note and label such thoughts, judgments and feelings as being thoughts, judgments or feeling. This can actually hasten their disappearance.
Dr. Germer advocates the second technique to free us of distractions and become present. He says you can label thinking as “thinking,” feeling as “feeling,” and so forth. You can label specific trains of thought, such as “beating up on myself again.” You can label specific emotions such as fear or sadness. You can also see emotion as “just emotion.” He gives an example of person dealing with fear. “That’s fear! Yes, but it’s only fear.” Dr. Germer says that giving a title to an emotion helps to contain it and relieve it so long as this is done in a soft, gentle way.
The idea is not to wish the feeling away (a form of resistance which would increase stress), but to identify it with a label and accept that you’re experiencing the feeling right now. Remarkably this relieves the power of negative feelings to cause pain. How? Neuroscience says that finding words for feelings deactivates the amygdala, the almond-shaped brain nucleus which triggers the stress response by keying up the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. Finding words for feelings decreases our fear of them and actually calms our brain.
(4) Labeling Schemas. According to psychologist Jeffrey Young of Columbia University a schema is an intertwined bundle of intense emotions, bodily sensations, thoughts, and behaviors, which are traceable to early childhood. Every person has one or more schemas which can be activated by circumstances. You can get an inventory of your schemas and learn more about them at www.schematherapy.com. Dr. Germer lists 18 different schemas in his book. Some examples are:
Mistrust/Abuse: I expect to get hurt or be taken advantage of by others.
Emotional Deprivation: I can’t seem to get what I need from others, like understanding, support, and attention.
Defectiveness/Shame: I’m defective, bad, or inferior in some way that makes me unlovable.
Self-Sacrifice: I’m very sensitive to others’ pain and tend to hide my own needs so that I’m not a bother.
Approval-Seeking/Recognition-Seeking: Getting attention and admiration are more important than what is truly satisfying to me.
Negativity/Pessimism: I tend to focus on what will go wrong and on mistakes I’ll probably make.
Punitiveness: I tend to be angry and impatient, and I feel people should be punished for their mistakes.
If working as a therapeutic lawyer activates any of these or the other kinds of schemas and you don’t realize it, then you’re at the mercy of your schema. This will limit the range of your perceptions, thoughts, and feelings, as well as your ability to respond in an open-hearted, flexible and creative way. Let’s say you’re a pessimist and when progress bogs down in mediation you say to yourself “Why bother?” “What’s the use?” or “What a waste of time!” Dr. Germer says you can help yourself in this very moment by mindful awareness of your schema, and by giving yourself self-compassion.
This will help soften and dissolve the pain, and free you up to interact in a much more open-hearted, connected way.
(5) Dr. Germer also lists various ways in which you can be kind to yourself physically, mentally, emotionally, relationally, and spiritually. Since space is limited here, I suggest you read his book for a complete list of practice options, but I will give some examples. For physical self-kindness try a nap, a massage or a warm bath. It also helps to truly savor sensual experiences by opening up all your senses and really drinking in the pleasure of a fine meal, beautiful natural scenery or loving sex with your spouse or partner. For mental self-kindness you can notice and count the number of negative self-judgments you make each day, and this will help reduce them. You can say “yes” when you’re pessimistic or “don’t know” when you catch yourself obsessing about an important decision. When you’re mentally stressed over something ask yourself how you’d feel about this if you just had a few weeks to live, and the bubble of anxiety will most likely pop.
For emotional self-kindness when you’re beating up on yourself ask what your best friend or what a famously kind religious figure like Jesus would say to you. For relational self-kindness focus on your wish to help others and avoid harming them. Helping a stranger and spending money on others are two ways to make you feel better.
For spiritual self-kindess take yourself less lightly. Teach yourself not to fear death. Contemplate the fleeting nature of existence and connect more closely with your Source (be it God, your Higher Power, the Universe, or a specific deity). Dr. Germer finishes his list of ways to be kind to yourself by suggesting we smile more, laugh more, and make an effort to cultivate positive emotions. The cultivation of positive emotions is a huge topic in itself which lies at the center of the new field of positive psychology. There are wonderful books on how to do this by Martin Seligman, Sonja Lyubomirsky, Marci Shimoff, Tal Ben-Shahar, Bob Nozik, Rick Hanson, Wayne Dyer, and the Dalai Lama, to name just a few.
Conclusion
The enterprise of reforming the way law is practiced so it has positive rather than negative therapeutic effects on people is admirable. To bring it off requires not only new ideas and new ways of relating to others within the legal system, but the capacity to be continuously compassionate without burning out. You can’t practice law in a non-adversarial way with a closed, angry heart. Remaining compassionate when faced with people at war, some of whom are likely to be difficult people, is a challenge. The way to meet that challenge is by learning and practicing self-compassion.
Redefining Success For Lawyers – Putting Money In Its Place
Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009American lawyers are the beneficiaries of an extraordinary educational system, they make a great deal of money, they have a very high standard of living and they help a lot of people. Yet one out of every five lawyers suffers from major depression, one out of every five is an alcoholic and more than half of all lawyers are very dissatisfied with their careers. It’s fair to say that many lawyers are miserable.
If you’re not happy practicing law, you may think that becoming happy is simply a matter of finding the right field of law, the right clients to represent or the right employer to work for with the right package of salary and vacation benefits. This is a mistake. What you do plays a much smaller role in producing happiness than how you see your life and career.
The major reasons for the misery of lawyers are attitudinal. They consist of lack of internal meaning, fixation on money as the standard of personal value and lack of gratitude. All three causes are in the mind. All of them are fixable. Let’s explore each one, see how they re-enforce each other and see what can be done to change them.
Lack of Internal Meaning
The lawyers who are unhappy see their job as a race against other lawyers to an imaginary finish line where the prize is money and peer recognition. They don’t see their job as a calling that enables them to maximize the use of their unique talents to serve others. They disregard their inner passions and independence of mind. Instead they pursue satisfaction outside themselves by piling up what society tells them is important – money and awards.
Once lawyers come to depend on the size of their income for self-esteem they set themselves up for depression when their income flattens out or drops. They can become depressed merely by reading about the huge salaries other lawyers make or the huge verdicts other lawyers have won. When you become dependent on status you obscure your inner nature and place yourself at the mercy of other people’s biased and fickle opinions.
A career is gauged by what businesses provide – job titles, salary and awards. A calling is more than a career. When you are called to do something inwardly you know why you are here, and what you were meant to do. Your confusion about what to do with your intelligence and skills drops away and a clear path emerges. You’re not working for yourself but in devotion to a larger cause that brings inner satisfaction.
A calling for a lawyer could be listening empathetically and making clients feel heard, understood and cared for. It could be telling an injured client’s story with such forceful passion and artful detail that it comes alive for a jury. It could be mediating disputes between divorcing parents in a healing manner that promotes sincere cooperation with regard to child custody, child visitation and child rearing issues. It could be structuring complex business deals so they are readily understandable, mutually beneficial and avoid unpleasant surprises down the line.
When you heed your calling and devote your law practice to it, you will reap great satisfaction. This satisfaction will flow irrespective of whether you win all your cases, whether you make more money than other lawyers, whether you rise to prominence and power within your law firm or whether you get favorable reviews (or any reviews) in the news media. The satisfaction flows from being in harmony with your unique inner nature and sharing your special gifts in a way that helps others.
Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, who served for many years as the rabbi at Oxford University, has written a book called The Broken American Male which applies equally well to workaholic male and female lawyers who struggle with self-esteem and depression. In this book Rabbi Boteach makes a very important distinction between healthy ambition and poisonous ambition.
Boteach says healthy ambition is based on the belief that each person is born special with a precious gift that only he can offer the world. By virtue of having this gift, he is obligated to share it with others. When he shares his gift he experiences deep inner satisfaction. Healthy ambition is liberating, because it sets us free to make the world a better place. We feel no guilt in living out this ambition, because it does not hurt anyone or satisfy us at anyone else’s expense. To use a talent that has come to us from our Source to serve others and make their lives better is to do the right thing.
Poisonous ambition is based on the belief that we are born worthless and we must compete against others in the world of work to distinguish ourselves. Since we live in a capitalist society, the way to distinguish ourselves is to impress people by making loads of money. Poisonous ambition is isolating and incarcerating, because it puts us in competition with everyone. In order to feel good about ourselves we must out earn other lawyers. In order to know if we’ve succeeded in getting to the top rung of the financial ladder, we must keep comparing ourselves to others. We can’t take pride in who we are and what we stand for. Instead we’re focused on what others are earning, and if they have earned far more than we have, we feel like nobodies.
Poisonous ambition never produces satisfaction, because it’s based on the deficit mentality of never having enough. Healthy ambition is based on a mentality of abundance that celebrates the unleashing and ever-expanding contribution of one’s special gifts to others. Boteach says it’s not in our financial success that we find specialness, but rather in our specialness as persons that we find success.
Some lawyers are lucky enough to find their calling before they even pass the Bar Exam. It could come from admiring and wanting to emulate a particular law professor, from an experience during a summer law school job or from hearing a graduation speech that stirred their soul. Some lawyers find their calling at a first, second or third legal job. Yet many lawyers never become sure what their special gift is or how to use it to maximize their positive contribution to the world.
While there’s no sure fire recipe for finding your calling, you can make progress in this direction by using experimentation, reflection and feedback. You can experiment by trying out different practice specialties and subspecialties or different roles within a practice area (e.g. the prosecution and defense sides in criminal cases, the landlord and tenant side in eviction cases or management and labor in employment disputes). You can experiment by representing different populations of clients (athletes, entertainers, foundations, non-profit corporations, the disabled or undocumented workers).
Reflection means you engage in a practice of some sort (such as meditation) in which you sit quietly, breathe slowly and deeply and gradually quiet the noisy chatter in your mind. In this meditative space of inner calm, you reflect upon which of your experiences in law practice you found most personally meaningful and satisfying without regard to the profit or recognition earned.
Feedback means you speak with trusted people (including family, friends, colleagues and clients) to get a sense of the situation in which they found you most genuine, most creative, most expressive, most helpful and most effective. If these people really know you, they are probably going to agree with each other, and they are probably going to select a situation in which you were happiest.
Fixation on Money As a Yardstick of Personal Value
Most lawyers do not make a sustained effort to identify an inner calling and pursue it. They are culturally conditioned to look towards something external to make them happy and that something is money, power and fame (but mostly it’s money). The sort of happiness you can get from having more money or recognition than other lawyers in your category of practice is called hedonic because it’s temporary and it never lasts. Your joy in getting a ten million dollar verdict morphs into misery the moment the appellate court reverses it or the moment a colleague gets a forty million dollar verdict. Your joy in being named a Superlawyer one year turns to depression the next year when they put someone new on the list and boot you off.
When a lawyer measures his human value by his profit, he needs to make much more money than is required for him and his family to live comfortably. He needs enough to feel like a “winner” and this requires him to keep asking about who earns what and to compare his earnings to their earnings. Instead of being in a position to feel happy for his colleagues, he is put in flat out competition with them to keep his own ego afloat, and he is at constant risk of falling into envy and depression if they out earn him. There are some major problems with living this way.
• How much money you make is not within your control and it varies greatly
from year to year and month to month.
• When you’re in a financial pinch and can’t pay your bills, your ego size and happiness level shrink drastically.
• Even when the money pours in, the situation never lasts. You will inevitably experience lean times. Since law practice is a financial roller coaster ride, you will experience tension, worry and anxiety when you tie your happiness to being a financial winner. When you learn about the huge salaries and mega bonuses of the most successful lawyers, you can easily wind up feeling like a nothing.
• In order to make more money than is required to live comfortably and more money than your fellow lawyers, you have to expend incredible amounts of energy at the office, but you can never catch up because someone out there is always making more than you. So you end up living to work not working to live.
• The burden of practicing this way makes law practice joyless. When you come home you’re so depleted as to be a husk of a person. The lights are off inside you. There’s no energy left to be attentive, open, conversational, warm and affectionate with your spouse or children. You long for mind-numbers and sensation-deadeners. Various kinds of alcohol, over-eating at dinner and lots of mindless TV are good for this purpose. Some night you might throw in some perfunctory sex designed for you to reach orgasm as quickly as possible, before you fall asleep – something that leaves your spouse feeling rejected and abandoned.
• Your slaving away at the office is not accepted at home an excuse for being away so often or for showing up without sufficient energy to be a good spouse or parent.
When you protest you’re working for them, your spouse and children don’t believe you. They say they would prefer to live more simply and humbly to have you home more, but you can’t bring yourself to do it. That’s because you feel worthless inside and must keep making money to feel good about yourself and avoid the agonizing shame and pain that goes with having a bad income year.
• The people you love want you home. They want you mentally present and emotionally available. They want your love, affection, interest, concern, encouragement, inspiration, wit and humor. They don’t want a zombie. When you act like a zombie they feel rejected and pull away. Your infrequent efforts to rekindle a relationship get rejected. You grow discouraged and give up.
An Example of Poisonous Ambition
Rabbi Boteach uses Donald Trump as an example of poisonous ambition based on money as the yardstick of human value. Although Trump is not a lawyer we can understand him and apply the Boteach’s comments about Trump to our own lives.
Boteach says Trump deals real estate so he make enormous sums and advertise his wealth to the world by putting his name on all his buildings, hosting a TV show in which the object is to share in his wealth and so forth. He says Trump is a broken man, because in spite of his gargantuan bank account, he is not happy. He is on a treadmill to prove himself constantly with trophy properties, trophy wives and trophy apprentices.
Rabbi Boteach says the foundation of a happy life includes loving and being loved by your spouse and children, being involved in and serving your community and having a spiritual connection with a higher power (which for him is the Jewish G-d). He reminds us that King Solomon, reputed to be the wisest and richest of men during Biblical times, wrote that all his wealth, power and fame came to “nothing” when it came to producing lasting happiness. Solomon realized towards the end of his life that having grandiose possessions and impressing others is not a recipe for real happiness.
Lack of Gratitude
Rabbi Boteach says that in the parable of the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve are not blissfully happy because of the beautiful trees, flowers, birds and butterflies. They are happy because they are satisfied with what they have and because they are satisfied with each other. When the serpent lets Eve know there is something more in the Garden that G-d has not shared with them, she and Adam taste of the Tree of Knowledge.
The curse of capitalism is that you think you can’t be happy without always making more money and acquiring more possessions. The cultural conditioning that produces this false belief comes in part from advertisers who tell us we are deficient and defective unless we buy their products to enhance our self-image. It comes from exclusive associations, organizations and clubs that require people to meet high thresholds of wealth to join. It comes from the publishers of magazines who post annual lists of the wealthiest people, the highest earning people, the most philanthropic people and so forth.
Yes meaningful work is an important ingredient of a happy, well lived life, but we are human beings not human doings. Happiness also requires the ability to just be and to feel good just being. The Buddha and Henry David Thoreau are just two of the many sages who have told us this. Happiness also requires the ability to appreciate, savor and celebrate what is good – being alive, being healthy, being able to walk, the love between you and your family, the pleasure of being with your friends, the beauty of the natural world, having talents along with the opportunities to express and share them, etc.
Here is where spirituality enters the picture. To be spiritual is not necessarily to be religious, since religious leaders can be sectarian, exclusive and war against others of different beliefs. Spirituality means perceiving yourself to be of infinite worth because you are part of this universe and because you have in some mysterious way been created by and put here by a G-d, a Source or a loving, beneficent, creative energy to play a unique, positive and healing role in the whole.
When you have an attitude of gratitude you are satisfied with what you have and glad for your portion. You don’t always want more, and complain when you don’t get it. You don’t have a deficit mentality and you don’t get depressed when you learn that other lawyers are earning more than you. Being grateful enlarges your heart and makes you compassionate. You remain compassionate towards yourself even when you have a low earning year. You are compassionate towards others and enjoy helping them. You are even grateful for the chance to have been helpful.
The lawyer without an internal sense of purpose who measures himself by what he earns compared to others is not grateful. He wrongly believes he has earned everything he’s ever received (because he bought it) and does not credit a higher power, nature or the labor of others in bringing him his food, his clothes, his house, his car and other goods. Because he is not grateful he is very demanding and impatient. He is also quick to criticize and complain of others – from the retail clerks and waiters who serve him to the employees who work for him. This is because he has money and by virtue of having money he deserves recognition and special treatment.
You can feel happy for a short time after pocketing a large fee, but to be happy for a lifetime requires that you be a whole person leading a balanced life. Obsessively pursuing ever higher levels of income and pricier possessions is not the way. You can’t have a relationship with your BMW. Does it profit you to be rich while being despised in your own home by your spouse and children for ignoring them to make so much money?
Of what benefit is your wealth if you don’t invest it in the future of your community? Thanks to his wife, Bill Gates changed from a glum, unpopular plutocrat to the world’s most recognizable philanthropist and a much happier man.
When you view money as a thing, as a symbol of success that can be purchased and worn like a costume to create a persona, you’re treating money in a selfish and de-spiritualized way. A more progressive way to view money is as a form of energy which is to be passed from person to person to benefit humankind as a whole. When you make money and pass it along to homeless people so they can get shelter, eat food and learn an employable skill, you have used money as energy.
Money is neither good nor bad in itself. There is nothing inherently wrong with making money. We and our families need money for food, shelter, clothes, education, medical care and so forth. The question for each of us, is what role money will play in our lives. Will we look to money to measure our human worth and serve as a foundation for our self-esteem (a life strategy sure to fail) or will we use it to live comfortably while we pursue a life of wholeness and balance?
If we can transform our career to a calling and develop heartfelt connection with our family, colleagues, friends, community and spirituality, then we can lead lives with stable, lasting happiness. In Man’s Search For Meaning, psychiatrist and death-camp survivors Viktor Frankl said: “Everything can be taken from a man but… the last of human freedoms – to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.” Will you allow society to pressure you into seeing yourself through money and force you to sacrifice your wholeness to make more money than you really need or will you choose differently?