Mindfulness and Lawyers
Legal Organizations are Changing
Forward-thinking law offices seek innovative ways to enhance organizational excellence and well-being. These programs allow your employees to gain the skills and competencies necessary to excel in today’s ever-changing legal environment.
Why is Mindfulness essential to legal professionals?
Life is stressful, and legal professionals are arguably one of the most stressed-out groups. The American Bar Association has done some research and concluded that approximately 28% of Lawyers experienced mild to high levels of depression. In addition, approximately 19% experience anxiety regularly.
Let’s face it, many tasks in the legal profession are geared to focus on the negative. In many cases, it’s all about mitigating the downside, protecting an asset, looking out for any dangers in the future etc. Our minds are really good at scanning and looking for danger: physical, social, financial danger etc. Our focus is locked onto that experience or situation when danger is perceived. This is really helpful in some instances but when we are not aware of what our mind is doing, it can hijack our focus and remain focused on dangers that do not really exist.
Why Mindfulness?
Being Mindful is all about becoming more aware of what is happening around us AND within us (in our minds and bodies) so we can then consciously decide to act in a manner that may be more helpful and productive versus reacting to situations or experiences automatically. This awareness or Mindfulness allows us to take charge of our lives and move in a direction we want to move into as opposed to just getting caught up in a negative emotional state.
There is a Better Approach
We all want to succeed and achieve. Unfortunately, many professionals (Lawyers included) still believe being tough and pushing themselves and/or others around is the only way they can “make things happen” and “achieve success” to “make it to the top”. This approach damages both physically and mentally, resulting in high anxiety, depression, stress and physical illness. The good news is that the latest findings in the fields of Psychology and Neuroscience show us a different approach: a Mindful and Compassionate approach.
Our 4 Steps to Balance™ approach and programs are designed to help legal professionals better deal with the challenges of their day-to-day work lives through Mindfulness. Becoming more balanced and resilient allows us to have that stable platform from which we can move in any direction we choose with greater ease and less stress; we achieve more of what we want our lives to be.
Here is what the American Bar Association says about Mindfulness in their 2017 Wellness Report:
Mindfulness meditation is a practice that can enhance cognitive reframing (and thus resilience) by aiding our ability to monitor our thoughts and avoid becoming emotionally overwhelmed. A rapidly growing body of research on meditation has shown its potential for help in addressing a variety of psychological and psychosomatic disorders, especially those in which stress plays a causal role. One type of meditative practice is mindfulness—a technique that cultivates the skill of being present by focusing attention on your breath and detaching from your thoughts or feelings. Research has found that mindfulness can reduce rumination, stress, depression, and anxiety. It also can enhance a host of competencies related to lawyer effectiveness, including increased focus and concentration, working memory, critical cognitive skills, reduced burnout, and ethical and rational decision-making…. Evidence also suggests that mindfulness can enhance the sense of work-life balance by reducing workers’ preoccupation with work.
The great news is that everyone can learn to improve. Mindfulness is a foundational skill that enables all others, and that is why all our professional development courses have Mindfulness at their core. Our courses focus on first teaching you our 4 Steps™ approach and then bringing in other approaches that allow you to APPLY these other skills more effectively in the real world.