Old school

I was at the check out at Zupan’s, Portland’s treasured locally-owned grocery store when the young bagger asked If I wanted bags. I pointed  to the bags I had brought in that were laying in front of her. “Oh gosh”,  she said, embarrassed, "I'm at the end of my shift and I’m just fried”.  I told her I used to work in a grocery store and understood. I added that at the time, we  punched the prices into the cash register, shoppers paid in cash, and we calculated the change ourselves. The checker and bagger at the same time said, “no bar codes?” “Nope,”  I answered, “Everything was manual.” Again they said in unison, “no barcodes?” as though it were unimaginable.  

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Anchors aweigh

We all do it. Many times a day without even thinking about it. We see a problem and go straight to a solution. Sometimes the problem is obvious: I cut my finger and it’s bleeding. I need a bandage. Much of the time the problem isn’t that simple, and the solution we identify can become the problem.

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Stressed out for good

One of my favorite clients recently worried about the stress on his team as they began to dive into some really cool and creative initiatives they were all excited about. How in the world were they going to get them done on top of an already full workload? I said it sounded like eustress. “What stress?" he asked. Eustress. The good kind.

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Love actually

It was novel at the time. Research began at Harvard in pre-WWII, depression-era 1938 to figure out not what makes people sick or go off the rails, but instead, what helps us thrive. The Harvard Study of Human Development amassed gobs of data across two centuries that uncovered the single most important contributor to our health and happiness: good relationships. More than exercise, diet, work, genes, success, money, or anything else.

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Holiday gift guide

It’s been the Sunday Morning word of the year and the main ingredient in most posts of curated wisdom. It doesn’t cost money. Giving and receiving it feels incredible. It helps resolve me-you conflict, breaks logjams in high stakes negotiations, and can, quite literally, save a life. When I forget to do it, I kick myself after, as it’s so obvious that it would have been better if I had.

It’s simple, but not easy, to just listen. To truly hear and understand the thoughts, feelings, beliefs, fears, and dreams of the human in front of us.

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Gradually, then suddenly

There’s a passage in Ernest Hemingway’s novel The Sun Also Rises in which a character named Mike is asked how he went bankrupt. “Two ways,” he answers, “Gradually, then suddenly.”

That quote popped out of something I read a couple of months ago and it really made me think. And the more I thought, the more those three words explained so much. In such a simple and profound way.

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A funny thing happened on my way across the country

I felt like an excited kid anticipating my cross-country trip from Oakland, CA to my new home in Charlotte, NC. Route 66! Lake Havasu and Winslow, AZ, Albuquerque, Amarillo, Oklahoma City, then to Little Rock, Nashville, and the Smokies before landing in Charlotte. Changing landscapes, cityscapes, cultures, and National Parks to experience! It was a great adventure, and it left me hopeful that people with vastly different beliefs can have civil and open conversations about hard-to-talk-about topics.

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The timeless values of Jeopardy!

In the midst of the post-election news blitz, a different kind of story got my attention. Burt Thankur, November 5th’s Jeopardy! Champion gave this emotional response when asked by Alex Trebek if there was anyone at home cheering him on: “Here’s a true story, man, … I learned English because of you. My grandfather, who raised me...I used to sit on his lap and watch you every day. So, it’s a pretty special moment for me, man. Thank you very much.” Did that ever bring a smile to my face as I thought about how that show had been a staple in our household as my kids grew up, everyone shouting out the answers. I think I hold the household worst record of right answers to the number of shouts.

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Cultivating resilience

When the economic crisis descended in 2008, I was involved with Oakland-based East Bay Community Foundation. We watched helplessly as scores of nonprofits were decimated. Yet, in the middle of the worst of it, a few were thriving. Curious, a couple of senior staffers wanted to know why. They found three things these thrivers were doing: they (1) adopted a razor sharp focus on the programs that had the greatest impact, (2) communicated — up, down, sideways, and all around — keeping all stakeholders informed, and (3) did what they said they were going to do. They delivered results.

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The (mis)pursuit of happiness

When Yale psychology professor Laurie Santos became head of a residential college for first-year students, she was shocked by the level of stress, depression, loneliness, and anxiety the students were experiencing. That, and her own self-described “below average” happiness level inspired her to create a course packed with evidence from the happiness research landscape that debunks what we’ve been conditioned to believe will give us the good life, exposes the faulty wiring in our brains that conspires to lead us astray, reveals what does make us happy, and teaches habits we can form to get there.

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Talk gooder

Classes begin at Harvard Business School this week, and a course that’s sure to fill up fast this year is Associate Professor Alison Wood Brooks’ new offering How to Talk Gooder in Business and Life. It’s based on gobs of data revealing the importance of how we talk — not the proper use of language or presentation skills — how we converse each other in our daily lives. Students will learn conversation skills based on research insights through lots of practice, feedback, reflection, and wisdom from occasional guest “practitioners” such as matchmakers and comedians.

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How do you know?

“I just knew.” It’s that feeling you instantly got when you met “the one” or clicked with a friend. Or when you instinctively knew that dog or cat that stood out from the rest of the litter was the one coming home with you, or that house or town you stepped into and just felt at home in. We’ve all experienced this kind of knowing.

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Hello in there, hello

Long before the hammer of social distancing shattered our ways of connecting, causing us to quickly pivot to figure out ways to be together, and worry about the emotional effects of isolation, sirens were sounding about loneliness as a global public health problem. Former Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy declared loneliness an epidemic in 2017.

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Can you hear me now?

As they do every December, both Oxford Languages (Oxford English Dictionary) and Merriam-Webster announced their word of the year for 2019…

I knew what my word of the year for 2019 was going to be in January. It was my word of the year in 2018. It’s an odds-on favorite for 2020. It’s pervasive in our work, our lives, relationships, our current events. Or, should I say its absence is pervasive.

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A sense of style

Often dismissed as nothing more than a dinner party game, sometimes misused to label, pigeonhole, or stereotype people, and occasionally the backdrop for Dilbertian team-building moments, personality typing is both widely used and controversial. I’ve found personality assessments to be an anchor tool in the emotional intelligence toolbox.

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Doctor’s orders

I was causing a ruckus with a controversial proposal in a leadership team meeting a few years ago. Tensions were high. Faces were red. Veins were bulging. It was beginning to break into a full-on yelI. I caught the general counsel’s eyes — he’d been staying out of it — and said, dryly, “This is going well, don’t you think?” After an awkward pause, everyone laughed. I’m not going to tell you the rest of the meeting went my way. I will say it helped turn down the heat measurably.

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Composureself

It can be just a little nudge, almost imperceptible. Or it can be a full-on heart pound that makes you wonder if you’re gonna need a trip to the emergency room. You’ve been triggered. Maybe it’s a snarky comment in a meeting, a critique from your partner about how you might’ve scrambled those eggs better, the tipping point of a crushing workload, or your manager just found a mistake in your analysis. If it’s a little thing, it might distract you from what you’re doing for a bit. If it’s a big thing, it can bring an out-sized sometimes regrettable reaction, or cause you to shut down. And it doesn’t feel so good.

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What really matters, part two

We’re drowning in this stuff. Ten steps to this, four ways to that. I like that Gallup has for decades teamed up with other organizations, economists, psychologists, and scientists, to understand the elements of a life well-lived — how we experience our lives and the things that are important to us — and they’ve kept it data-based and fad-free. While global well-being research informs broader societal decisions for employees, communities, and countries, it’s helpful for us to be reminded of what really matters, as we often operate on autopilot in our busy and distracted lives.

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Once upon a time… in your mind

The only thing we know for sure about the stories we tell is that they’re not true. Not completely, anyway. Our make-believe can range from getting the details surrounding an emotional event wrong to being unshakably sure of the stories we tell about ourselves that are often turn out to be mind-made.

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Clean up that mess

Integrity is such a big word. It’s the most common value people and organizations cite as “table stakes,” a have-to-have. We want to have it, we want those around to have it, we want our organizations to have it. It’s hard to live up to, especially when we’re challenged and our emotions get the better of us, and our blind spots can get in the way.

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