Reading

Friends, what are you reading these days? 
How have your reading patterns evolved? 
How and what we read in general is very different now from even ten years ago, let alone 20 or 30, no?

What’s good about my reading right now?
–I read no political opinion and very little news anymore. I’m still informed, and my life is much better this way.
–I read on digital devices as well as print now. I have the Everand (formerly Scribd), Kindle, and BookFunnel apps, so I always have a bevy of titles to read wherever I go, all in few ounces of iPhone.
–I can get pretty much any book I want within seconds or days, depending on the format. That’s pretty amazing.
–My reading habits are happily looser now. I allow myself to not finish books that don’t resonate. I let myself skim. This makes me surprisingly fearless about starting any book (who knew one could have that fear?), freed from obligation.
–I consume many more genres than ever; my perspective widens and I learn so much more.

What could be better?
–I want to retain more of what I consume.  Although I may do better than I realize.  I started listening to Master of Change by Brad Stulberg and bought the hardcover halfway through so I could mark it up, really absorb it.  Turns out I had already soaked up the parts that mattered.  Maybe it’s about repetition.  I have listened to my favorite books multiple times, and each time something different stands out, depending on the current state of my life, deepening my relationship with the authors’ concepts and practices.  At least I’ve stopped rushing through audiobooks at 1.2x speed.  1x is fine now, unless I’m cramming for book club, then it could be 2x+.
–Still working on discipline.  I fantasize about reading and writing every day…  And I mean eyeball reading here, which would require me to be still and do nothing else.  Okay blog and book work first; one thing at a time.  Maybe start small—two to three short eyeball sessions a week?
–I need more bookshelves, or to donate the books I don’t want… Likely both.  My books deserve better than to live in random (though neat) piles all over my house.  Goal by 12/31/2023.

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What’s good about our reading as a society?

Access. It boggles me how easily we can obtain any written content.  YAAAYY!  Paywalls not withstanding and with reliable internet service, we could spend our whole lives reading any article from any news outlet, magazine, or blog, and so many sources, on our little handheld computers.  When I want a book, I look first on the public library site.  They often have it in print, large print, downloadable audiobook, and CD audiobook.  If it’s at a far away branch, I can ask to transfer it to my neighborhood and be notified on its arrival.  If all copies are in use, I can place a hold and be notified when it’s available.  If they don’t have it, I look on Everand to see if it’s included in my membership.  If not, the app will show me related books, podcast episodes, and news or magazine articles.  If it’s not there, I can search Bookshop.org or my local indie bookstore sites to see if they have or can order it.  If I still can’t find it, I can go on Amazon.  Once there, I can see availability in print, or on Kindle, Audible, and Whispersync.  In print, Amazon will link to new and used copies from other vendors. I add books to my wish list and receive notifications when they go on sale.  And sometimes a title I want will be included in my Audible membership for a limited time.  There is even an app on my phone that will read me whatever text is currently on my screen.  And the Pocket app lets me save articles to read or reference later.  Ho.ly.Cow.  Amazing.

What could be better?

Read to the end.  How many words/minutes/pixels(!?) do you read before you abandon a news or interest article?  According to Slate, where I saw the graphic above, most online readers get through about half of the articles they open.  Interesting also is that many comment and share without reading to the end.  I did this with the link around ‘very little news’ above.  Mark Manson warns how long the article is by giving a table of contents at the top (It really is quite long, I scrolled to the end and it looks really good, typical Manson).  I’ll read the whole thing; right now I’ gotta get this post published [edited to add: read it through; highly recommend].  I just feel good that the title validates my behavior.  I did fully read the Slate, TIME, and MarketingDive articles I found by searching “how many minutes before american readers abandon an article”.  I generally try to read whole articles before sharing, and if they’re long, I’ll include my favorite excerpts in my Facebook posts so friends don’t have to read the whole thing if they don’t want to.  The analytics on this blog show that readers rarely click all the links I include.  That’s okay, I do it for me as much as for you.  But I think we’d all be better off if we took (and it must be taken) the time to read longer and more in depth.

Vet.  The downside of access to vast information, obviously, is the widely variable quality of that information.  If you’re looking for reliable medical information, stick with WebMD and the big academic medical centers—look for ‘.edu’.  Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, and the University of San Francisco all publish excellent articles on myriad symptoms and conditions.  For guidelines, go to the US Preventive Services Task Force.  Look at the ‘about’ page on any website; sometimes even then it can be hard to know what a given group’s agenda or funding source.  That’s when I search about the organization itself. I rarely take advice from any site that’s trying to sell a product.
Vetting information of any kind takes time.  Mostly it must be done by reading.  If we’re going to be a truly well-informed citizenry and electorate, however, it must be done. 

From the Iowa City Mom Collective

Share in service of connection.  I still fall into the trap of rage posting, thankfully less now than before.  Let us all be more mindful, yes?  Before sharing on social media, or emailing and text blasting our friends, let us THINK:  What will this accomplish?  How does this make our day/life better?  How am I impacting others by putting this on their consciousness?  I’m not saying we should not commiserate over common grievances.  But let’s gather our information with more depth, process and digest it a while, and then discuss calmly in personal conversation?  Maybe over a healthy meal?

Both individually and collectively, we need to slow down, select our information sources thoughtfully, engage with worthy sources mindfully, manage our impulses better, and make time for deeper, more meaningful and critical understanding of what we read.  The ultimate benefit of this is elevation of our knowledge, our conversations, and thus our connections, locally and at scale. 

Read on, my friends.

Relationships

Photo by Lyra Luu, June 2023

“Let’s talk about your relationships. What’s already good, and what could be better?”

It has never occurred to me to ask a patient (or anybody, really) about their relationships this way. … How would that go, do we think? I feel like there’d be a pause… It might feel a little awkward? Maybe a bit invasive? Too personal and too broad at the same time? I think it could be potentially amazing.

As I ask myself now and am about to write, what happens feels akin to navel gazing from 10,000 feet. How do I show up in my relationships? How am I the exact same person everywhere, to everybody, all the time, and how do I also alter, mask, suppress, or overexaggerate? Why? How do I feel about any/all of it, and what does that tell me? How would others answer, people who know me primarily in one context and not others? What if they answered differently from how I expect? Oh, how fascinating!

What does the question set bring up for you, I’m so curious?

So, what’s already good about my relationships:
–I care a lot about the quality of my relationships and I cultivate them thoughtfully, with great attention, intention, and love, even when it’s hard.
–I hold my relationships strongly and loosely at the same time. Seneca said, “Ponder for a long time whether you shall admit a given person to your friendship; but when you have decided to admit him, welcome him with all your heart and soul.” I often don’t ponder long; I know quickly when I want to be friends with someone. And then I’m all in. Until I’m not, which happens sometimes. I can let go when it’s clear that holding on does not serve me or the other person. I’m also open to reconnecting later–life is unpredictable and relationships are fluid, so attuning to conditions and adjusting containers as it all flows and evolves is a practice in acceptance and flexibility, which I value. I think this serves me as well as those I’m in relationship with.
–I am a conscientious student of relationships; I let all of mine teach me and I learn from observing others. I think this makes me a better person overall.

What could be better:
–My relationship with my body. The cosmos moved me to watch “Good Luck to You, Leo Grande” before writing this post today. HIGHLY RECOMMEND, especially for middle aged women like me who feel past their prime, physically attractive years. Emma Thompson is my hero for portraying her character with such rawness, honesty, and grace. I feel better about myself after watching this movie, and I think that will continue to improve.
–Revising old narratives. When I’ve known someone a long time or had particularly intense interactions with them, I tend to hold tightly to the stories I tell about them. I label them, then confirmation bias runs away with me in subsequent encounters, sometimes for many years. This is high risk for dysfunctional prejudice, both negative and positive. Mantras work well for me in general… I wonder what words I can pull on to remind me to reassess, revise, and amend, for all our sakes?


So what’s already good about your relationships?

What’s good about how we all relate collectively?
Tribes. Whoever and wherever your are, I hope you have at least a few groups in which you feel true belonging. Sports fandoms, book clubs, D&D campaigns, improv classes; work teams, professional societies, PTA, with your besties. We all function better when our connections with others are strong and tight. When these connections cause our tribes to uplift other tribes in turn, and not denigrate or oppress, even better.
Potentialagain. So interesting, how ideas resurface in each post so far this month. Psychology, anthropology, sociology, education, medicine, marriage, and just life in general–if you study and attend long and broadly enough, the core practices of good relationships in all domains start to distill and clarify. We may put forth different parts of ourselves and show up very differently in any given role or environment, and in the end we are all still human, with all the same social, emotional, and relational needs. It. Is. NOT. Rocket science! So no matter how bad it all gets and how poorly we do it today, we can always do it better tomorrow. Resources for learning abound.

What could be better?
–Navigating Polarity and Complexity. A primary pitfall of tribal membership and identity is us vs them thinking, orienting tribes in competition rather than collaboration, with one another. Differences are inevitable, and when manged well, they make us productive and constructive. Managed poorly, they incite war and destroy lives. We would do well to avoid oversimplified, overgeneralized, and judgmental expressions of out-groups voiced by the loudest and most extreme among our in-groups, and acquire both personal and collective communication skills that help bridge differences rather than escalate them.
–Leadership by Example. Government. Come on, folks. We, the citizenry, must expect, demand, and elect better. Those of us who know better, though, must also hold our local leaders to higher standards of relational behaviors and practices. Easier said than done, and in the long run, well worth the individual and collective effort.
–Masculine and Feminine Integration. This just occurs to me tonight as Daughter and I watched again the Cinema Therapy episode on toxic, or ‘limiting’ masculinity, contrasted by Aragorn of The Lord of the Rings movies. I’m not referring here to women’s liberation and militant feminism. I’m thinking of moving our culture to a place where assertiveness and courage in women, as well as tenderness and vulnerability in men, among other complex qualities in each, are equally valued, cultivated, and upheld. We can move from an us vs them, either/or, this not that, to an all and, ‘we each contain multitudes’ cultural gender mindset. When we are all allowed and encouraged to be our whole emotional and psychological selves, our relationships will be un(currently)fathomably more meaningful and fulfilling.

Ooo, fun. This concludes posts on the 5 reciprocal domains of health, asking what’s already good and what could be better, for myself personally and for all of us collectively. Turns out this appreciative inquiry, strengths based prompt structure really does both helpfully constrain and free my writing, at least so far. I’ve been talking about these five domains for many years, and never quite in this way. How eye opening. I hope you’re enjoying the posts so far, friends! I really look forward to the rest of the month!

Stress Management

Anybody else feel daunted thinking about stress managment lately? [wide eyed emoji]

It’s November of the hardest year in my recent professional memory, and the escalating stress levels I witness every day show no signs of abating. My patients are sleeping poorly, gaining weight, and their blood pressure continues to rise. They miss quality time with loved ones and rethink their life paths more seriously now than ever. Strangers on the street seem increasingly confrontational. The world is once again embroiled in war and violence. Our stress management skills are called forth, no question.

I attended the second ever Harvard Medical School coaching conference in the spring of 2009, where I met Benjamin Zander and The Art of Possibility became my personal development bible. Roz Zander, co-author, former wife, and decades long collaborator to Ben Zander, died suddenly this year. I hope my writing and impact may honor her, as these 14 years of my inner and outer work, sparked by the Zanders at that meeting, made me a better person that I would otherwise have been, founded on the practices in their book.

**Deep breath**

It’s been at least a decade, and I still ask patients to assess work stress in terms of threat and challenge. Threat stress–basically fight or flight–is physiologically taxing, meant to last seconds (not years), and costs us our health if prolonged. Challenge stress is activating, productive, and beneficial. I also query about personal fulfillment from work–meaning. We can tolerate very high levels of stress, even prolonged threat, if it’s worth it to us.

Parenting may be a better example than work. When we fear for our children’s well being, and even their lives in crises, how do we manage that? Is there any worse threat? We’d all rather it be ourselves suffering than our kids, right? How do we cope when we have no control?

At the risk of sounding arrogant, I feel very confident in my stress management skills. This is not to say I don’t experience severe stress or feel its consequences. I just move through it much more easily and with a lot less suffering now than in the past. I feel a lot less threat than challenge. Briefly, the practices:
Breathe. Ever since my first medical assistant posted “TAKE A DEEP BREATH” at my workspace, I have appreciated the calming effect of one deep breath, physically and psychologically. We can breathe ourselves through childbirth, injury, emotional trauma, and myriad other urgent and emergent situations. Deep breathing stimulates the de-escalating parasympathetic (rest and digest) nervous system, balancing the autonomic hijack mediated by the sympathetic system. I breathe along with patients when I listen to their lungs. I inhale deeply when listening to books, and during strenuous exercise. It is my central grounding practice.
Accept. “It is what it is.” This has nothing to do with how I feel about it. But the sooner I separate what is from what I want it to be, the less I suffer. Obviously I find this much easier to do for things I care less about. But even for big things, like the state of our healthcare system, the brokenness of our government, and my estimate of the ultimate demise of humanity (I think five more generations, give or take), just being with what is, as a first step to figuring out what to do next, helps me suffer a lot less.
Withhold judgment. I’m really good now at not jumping to conclusions and not making sweeping judgments about people based on limited information. I am able to separate judgment of actions from people’s character and humanity. If you’re screaming at my team and me, you are clearly unwell. We can hold you accountable to your actions and still show you compassion and respect. I don’t have to think you’re a bad person. This way, I don’t take your negative actions personally, and I can stay calm and even.
Get help. I ask every patient every year about their emotional support network, because it matters. Mine is phenomenal and I could not be more grateful. But I only know they are so because I call on them enough and they on me. Rarely I am disappointed, and I learn to turn elsewhere. I cannot overstate the profound importance of tribe and connection. It is my raison d’etre.
Move. When daughter was admitted to the hospital and I stayed with her there, I made sure to get on the ellipitical each day that week. When I go too many days without movement, I get edgy and stuck in my thoughts. My stress is exponentially more manageable if I protect my workouts, which I have now done for many years.
Attune and differentiate. My greatest stressors involve other people. Friction, tension, grating, colliding, etc. Since my LOH leadership training helped me articulate these complementary concepts, I recognize now that attuning/aligning with others, as well as differentiating and standing firm in my own core values and practices are equally important and fluid in their dynamics. Feeling out that optimal integration in any given interaction is rewarding in itself, and the outcomes are always better when I attend to both, knowing that I am showing up true to myself. What more can I ask of me?

So what could be better? Anything, really. For the rest of my life, new stressors will continually emerge. In his book Master of Change, Brad Stulberg quotes a statistic that in an average adult life, we will experience 34 major disruption events, which works out to about one every 18 months. Sounds about right to me! So I can expect to be challenged and trained in all of these skills and more, usque ad mortem. I only hope I can keep learning, applying, improving, and growing. Bring it.

I feel less harshly about our collective, societal stress management skills and outcomes than I do about our obessions and ironies with exercise and nutrition. Really, I think everybody’s doing the best they can, with the skills they have, in the circumstances of their lives at any given time. I just wish our environments didn’t create and perpetuate so many of our stressors in the first place.

So what’s already good?
Potential. We are all surrounded by one another. So every encounter, any time, any place, is an opportunity to do people-ing better. In any given relationship, if anyone is willing at all, there is always the chance for repair after rupture. Humans are innate learners; we can continually acquire the skills to stop impaling ourselves with the second arrow of suffering, after the arrows of pain hit us in daily life. We can even hold one another up and heal our injuries together.
Books, teachers, resources. Those aisles and shelves of stress management books really are dense, and I can say with conviction from first hand consumption that the knowledge and potential benefit living in those pages is immense. For those with the bandwidth to actively seek, consume, digest, and apply, lives can be transformed, especially if shared, discussed, and practiced together.
–Sometimes it really doesn’t take much. Your friend calls to check on you. A stranger helpsy you carry your groceries. When we say ‘it’s the little things,’ we speak truth. Small acts of kindness and incidental connections will not solve our hardest problems, but we must not underestimate their profound potential to help, and for that help to amplify in unexpectedly large ways. What’s more, both the helper and the helped benefit from the encounter.

What could be better?
–Teach it explicitly. There is a movement afoot among Dialectical Behavior (T)herapists to formally incorporate stress management skills into school curriculum. DBT organizes life skills around four central pillars: Mindfulness, Emotional Regulation, Distress Tolerance, and Interpersonal Effectiveness. Within each module are sets of practices, many with campy acronyms to help us remember. I refer patients to the DBT skills website often, not just to help them cope better themselves, but to help them model better coping skills to their children, direct reports, and leaders. Simply having the confidence that we can handle whatever comes our way, because we know what to do, decreases stress exponentially. What if we learn these skills in childhood, before the chaos of adolescence and serial tumult that is adulting? Can you imagine?
–Relational Leadership Training and Valuation. Leadership done well is a practice in empathic, compassionate, accountable, and transparent stewardship. It is a way of being and doing, one that requires high level self-awareness and self-regulation, and excellent attunement and communication skills. Right now I think leadership training focuses a lot on transactional communication, superficial team dynamics, and not enough on building leaders’ stewardship mindset and deeper relational skills. We should require evidence of these skills for promotion and provide communal support and feedback to strengthen their practice. This would reduce overall stress in organizations by building cultures of empathy, compassion, accountability, and transparency from the top. Workers’ stress, in my observation, stems in large part from toxic cultures set by relationally inept leaders.

So, another plot twist, but maybe not really. My solution to stress management optimization is relationship-centered: first relationship with self, then between self and others, and then between/among those who know us, by way of example setting.

Stress is complex. Its optimal management is a lifelong practice. It’s never too late to start, and no skills practice is too small or wasted.

“The only way out is through. The best way through is together.” I think that applies here.