Ep #14: The ABCs of Being a Mindful Lawyer
Being Mindful with the Spiritual Litigator
Release Date: 03/14/2019
Being Mindful with the Spiritual Litigator
In this week’s episode, I talk about “5 Types of People Who Can Ruin Your Life” by Bill Eddy, a lawyer and a therapist.
info_outline Ep. #20: Managing Morning AnxietyBeing Mindful with the Spiritual Litigator
In this week's episode, I talk about how I use routines to manage my morning anxiety.
info_outline Ep. #19: That Case is NOT Your "Baby"Being Mindful with the Spiritual Litigator
In this week's episode, I discuss why identifying your case as your "baby" can trigger your primal fight or flight response any time that "baby" is threatened.
info_outline Ep. #18: Criticism Will Not Kill YouBeing Mindful with the Spiritual Litigator
In this week's episode, I talk about three main reasons why criticism leads to beliefs that cause such intense negative emotion.
info_outline Ep. #17: What I'm Reading: GritBeing Mindful with the Spiritual Litigator
am happy to report that my goal of reading one book per month has been successful so far.
info_outline Ep. #16: Panic-Free Legal WritingBeing Mindful with the Spiritual Litigator
In this week's podcast episode, I discuss how to use mindfulness to change the beliefs that cause lawyers to panic when working on a legal writing assignment or project such as a brief or memo.
info_outline Ep #15: Sometimes You Are WrongBeing Mindful with the Spiritual Litigator
My fellow litigators: sometimes you will be so sure that your case strategy will work and that someone else’s suggestion will not. And sometimes you will be completely and utterly wrong. If you do not accept that, you will experience the unnecessary emotional and physical consequences of failing to manage your mind.
info_outline Ep #14: The ABCs of Being a Mindful LawyerBeing Mindful with the Spiritual Litigator
On today's episode, I talk about the intersection between mindfulness and psychology and how having an understanding of how your brain works and identifying the beliefs that cause negative emotions, actions or results within your legal practice can lead to serious and sustainable improvements.
info_outline Learning to Be a Present LawyerBeing Mindful with the Spiritual Litigator
In this week’s podcast episode, I discuss being a present lawyer.
info_outline Setting Realistic Boundaries in Your Law PracticeBeing Mindful with the Spiritual Litigator
In this week’s podcast episode, I discuss setting realistic boundaries in your law practice. If you do not set boundaries with your clients, adversaries, or partners, your productivity and motivation can suffer. Additionally, if you don’t set boundaries in your personal relationships, you may end up with less of them. This episode gives some examples of how to set realistic boundaries and what to do when your boundaries are breached.
info_outlineWhile doing some research on the intersection of mindfulness and psychology in preparation for a mindfulness seminar, I found something that clicked with me: the cognitive model by psychologist Albert Ellis that has been the backbone of cognitive behavioral science for decades and is extremely simple.
A – Activating Event;
B- Beliefs; and
C- Consequences (Emotions, Actions & Results).
Once you realize that you have a belief system that is causing negative consequences, you have a choice to
D- Dispute your beliefs and create
E – Effective new beliefs.
Using mindfulness to apply this to my life has been extremely effective because it really helped me to have an understanding of how my brain works and identify the beliefs that lead me to the negative emotions actions or results within my legal practice and within my life.
Check out this episode to mindfully make the ABCs work for you.