The Reward of Continuous Consolidation

I’ still got it!

I have not studied or spoken about burnout in some years now. So I was a bit nervous when my colleague referred an organization to me to talk through their workforce’s experience of it now. The introductory call went swimmingly, three of us women leaders connecting around both challenges and the emergent possibilities.

As I wrote my follow up email (below), it struck me how the past ten years of learning, integrating, and application have coalesced solidly, and I can easily pull on the knowledge and expertise ad hoc. Wow, how rewarding. I document here for myself, so please feel no need to read it all.

I wish you all this firm, ongoing consolidation of experience, learning, and connection. We really just never know when, where, and how we can help one another. I hope you are offered the opportunity often, and that you may take advantage of the chance to connect in service.

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Dear (Leader Woman #1),

Thank you and (Leader Woman #2) so much for the call today!  I had so much fun thinking through the conundrums—your organization is definitely not alone!

I will forgo reiterating how I understand the challenges, and just list the ideas and resources that came to mind.

These notes are as much for my own future use (in case we end up doing anything together) as for you all.

  1. Goals and trade-offs.  Analogy to adult children and aging parents. Different stakeholders will have different goals, and to maintain healthy relationship we must disclose and negotiate—preferably early and often, and ongoing.  What goals can we agree on, and then what are we each/all willing and not willing to do to achieve?
  2. Appreciative inquiry and motivational interviewing:  to query members of the group, start with what’s good, what we want to keep.  What makes you want to be here, what do you get out of it, how are your relationships great, how is the work meaningful to you?  Get people to tell stories, get specific, describe how it feels in their bodies, and how it relates to their core values, personalities, etc.  If engagement is low, ask how it could be just a little better, what needs to happen?  Encourage people to get personal, to do their own inner exploration. Too often when we are unhappy and burned out, we don’t attend to what’s good and how to leverage or expand it.
  3. Intrinsic motivation:  When we do things for ourselves, aligned with our own goals and values, we are much more engaged.  Drive by Daniel Pink describes this phenomenon, as well as how organizations can maximize it for workers.
  4. Managing Transitions by William and Susan Bridges.  Determine what has ended and let people grieve it.  Shepard them (and ourselves) through the middle space post-loss and pre-new norm.  Engage people in the co-creation, or at least be transparent and reassuring about the plan/map
  5. Polarity Management by Barry Johnson and Navigating Polarities by Emerson and Lewis.  The company is Polarity Partnerships.  I have not worked with them directly, but I have received permission from them to share their proprietary framework in my writing and publication.  I learned about them in my leadership training, and I use this framework all the time in both professional and personal perspective taking.
  6. Honesty, sincerity, empathy, compassion, and accountability.  These are core requirements of leaders when initiating conversations meant to help those they lead in any project—to win hearts and engage minds.  Unless leaders can fake it well and indefinitely (in which case you might as well care, right?), workers can sense when they are not the priority.  Based on all of my study, it’s when we care for our people that we meet our goals–it’s the only way to get everybody rowing together, with their backs into it—because they are in it for both themselves and for one another.  I couldn’t think of him during our call but Simon Sinek is my hero for this concept.  His books Start With Why and Leaders Eat Last are consistent repeat listens for me. 
  7. Give and Take by Adam Grant dovetails well with Drive, addressing not just burnout but the benefits and costs of competition, etc.  
  8. Generational communication and mutual learning.  I am 51, Chinese-American, and a mom.  Most of my patients are white men within ten years of my age.  I no longer teach medical students or residents, so my exposure to younger folks is limited at work.  But I joined a gym where most of my now friends are about 20 years younger than me.  I am fascinated, lifted, and considered wise. 😜 My point here:  It will be fantastic if the elder leaders in any organization can shift from seeing their juniors as lazy and gritless (which is the traditional attitude since forever) to fresh and innovative, and full of new potential.  We elders do well when we own our strengths and wisdom, imparting them kindly and in service of developing our juniors, rather than lording it over them and making them feel small.  We can engage and engender trust and respect, thereby more effectively calling forth effort, loyalty, engagement, creativity, and quality work.  It’s about relationship and psychological safety—interpersonal effectiveness and leading by example.
  9. Embrace the discomfort of feedback.  Do not take it personally. Look for patterns (and if the issue is a person, address that person kindly and compassionately).  See it both objectively and subjectively, from the perspective of those giving it.  Find the nuggets of truth in every response and address those.
  10. My favorite book of all time is The Art of Possibility by B and RS Zander.  Each chapter title is a catch phrase that reminds us how to show up our Central Selves (essentially collaborative) rather than our Calculating Selves (socialized to be competitive–these are my own oversimplifications), to ourselves and one another.  I use these phrases every day in leadership, doctoring, parenting, friending, and writing.

We are all human, emotional beings with the capacity for logic and reason—but we think we are the converse.  So when we rationalize something one way and others do it differently, we think we are reasonable and they are irrational.  The truth is that we all have our own priorities and mental mapping systems, many of which we are not even consciously aware of ourselves.  So the more we can approach one another (and ourselves) with humility and curiosity, the more we can connect and co-create easily and effectively.

Both Bridges and Johnson offer services that may be relevant and helpful to your organization.  

Please find attached the slide deck of my most recent presentation to judges of the US 7th Circuit Court.

Here are a few blog posts that came to mind during our conversation today:

  1. Inclusive Leadership
  2. Attune and Attend
  3. A5R:  Attune, Attend, Assess, Adjust, Adapt, Repeat

I’m happy to reconnect whenever you think I can be of more help.

Best wishes to you both and your whole organization!
Peace–
Cathy Cheng

Time, Books, Bread, and Love

What is/are your love language/s?

According to Gary Chapman’s popular book The Five Love Languages, mine are, in order: quality time, words of affirmation, receiving gifts, physical touch, and acts of service. Since learning the framework, I have observed for Husband’s and Kids’ languages, and become more fluent in a few of their respective dialects. Some are easier to pick up than others! It’s humbling to think how friends and family may feel rejected by me when I respond sideways to their bids for love, because I don’t understand their intent. “Rats!” as friend Eileen would say. I can do better!

On the other hand, how wonderful when I can converse in love speech with someone in appreciation and joy? Words are definitely my currency–quality time for me means being together talking, and not just about pop culture and current events. I consider any thoughtful or personal verbal expression a gift, and especially anything via snail mail. I get positively giddy when I open the mailbox and see colored envelopes, interesting stamps, and omg stickers–it all just makes my heart sing.

Friend and fellow writer Nicole recently recommended the book Write For Your Life by Anna Quindlen. It’s a fast, easy, and heartwarming read by the veteran journalist and novelist. It validates my insatiable need to write–for myself and for sharing–and inspires me to do it with ever more abandon and joy. Quindlen reflects on the timeless relevance of Anne Frank’s diary, and our collective delight in finding old letters between lovers from the past. She wishes her parents left more words on paper, in their own hand, now that she can no longer connect with them in a tangible, tactile way. Even if you’ve never thought writing could stimulate, soothe, inspire, or connect you, this short work may convince you otherwise. Spending quality time with yourself and your thoughts, processing through pen on paper, may yield ideas, insights, and epiphanies that come no other way; and those who read them subsequently may benefit and connect to you in ways you cannot yet not imagine. So inspired was I after reading, that I bought multiple copies of WFYL and gifted them to friends. With each volume I selected a specific journal to go along. Pleather- and cloth-bound, blank, lined books invite original composition with artfully embossed covers: windblown trees; “Be the Change”; “ZEN AS F*CK”.

For my friend who took on a big new hairy leadership role, I included 6 additional works: The Art of Possibility, Benjamin and Rozamund Stone Zander; Switch, Chip and Dan Heath; Big Magic, Elizabeth Gilbert; Rising Strong, Brene Brown; Drive, Daniel Pink; and The Infinite Game, Simon Sinek. To the one who stands together with his wife at their respective professional crossroads, I accompanied Quindlen with John O’Donohue’s wisdom in To Bless the Space Between Us. His poems soothe, uplift, warm, and reassure, promoting reflection and also whispering, coaxing our own wisdom to emerge from within. Sharing others’ words, wiser and more eloquent than my own, is another way I love my friends.

When I can get the timing right, of course I also include some sourdough in the gift bag. Sven continues to thrive, leavening my loaves reliably for a over a year now. His heirloom flour descendant, whose products my gluten-intolerant friends can eat without consequence, has finally also developed that fruity aroma that I recognize as my starter. There is something special about giving and receiving gifts we make (or write) by hand, with our time, talent, and treasure. It’s just another level of love, expressed concretely and tangibly.

Nobody questions the value of sharing and expressing love between friends and family.

But what about between colleagues? Leaders and those they lead? Systems and their contingent members? What does it take to learn and attempt to speak anybody’s ‘love’ language? When we do personality tests at the office and find out who’s an introvert or extravert, who thinks versus feels their way to a decision, can we as leaders and coworkers make the effort to communicate–to relate–on another’s terms in addition to our own? I fail at this day after day; rats! I can do better!

In the end it’s about how we each feel seen, heard, understood, accepted and loved–why limit this essential and life-sustaining human reciprocity to ‘loved ones’? Better yet, why not include all with whom we are in any relationship among those we consider ‘loved‘? It may require quite a brave and committed redefinition of and reorientation to ‘love’, no? But how might this inspired shift in perspective, even by only a fraction of one degree, profoundly alter the course of business, healthcare, education, government–everything?