What Does Joy Have to Do With It?

What Does Joy Have to Do With It?

I was recently sitting in the office of a senior executive of a major corporation in the San Francisco Bay Area. He was a coaching client and we were meeting for the first time.?His eyes looked pained, and his shoulders were slightly hunched when he said, "How did I get so busy and yet manage to feel so uninspired? Why does my life feel stale? Why do I have a gnawing sense of defeat much of the time? Internally I am either churning or numb. What happened to the enthusiasm and excitement I had for life when I was young, just setting out in my career and marriage? When did my life get so out of balance?"

Behind him, I noticed a nearly life-size wooden cutout of a rhinoceros. How odd, I thought. What was this large creature doing lurking in the office of this senior executive? "What is that?" I asked.?

The man smiled for the first time during our meeting. "Oh, that was from an event that we held about fifteen years ago. Since there was no place to store it and I didn’t want it thrown out, this rhino has been living in my office ever since."?

"That image reminds me of a story,” I told him. Then I shared old Zen story that goes like this:?

A teacher says to his attendant, "Bring me my fan, the rhinoceros horn fan." Apparently, the teacher had a special fan that either had a painting of a rhinoceros or perhaps was made with some sliver of rhinoceros horn. The attendant responds, "I’m afraid your rhinoceros horn fan is broken."?

I stopped and asked my client, "What do you think the teacher said?"?

He responded with a shrug; he didn’t know.?

I told him, "The teacher stated sternly, ‘Then bring me the rhinoceros!"?

We both chuckled. It’s a silly, preposterous story that made about as much apparent sense as the rhinoceros that was in the room.?

I asked my client to look at his rhinoceros. I suggested that he remember what he felt like when he brought it into his office many years ago. I imagined that it must have felt lighthearted, risky, surprising, and I shared this with him.?

"Yes," he acknowledged and smiled. "I was new to my job – excited and nervous."?

"Well, let’s see if we can bring back some of that surprise, and that energy, into your work and life right now,” I responded. “Some of that rhinoceros energy!"?

The Zen story is about joy, surprise, and creative energy. The teacher is saying to his attendant, "Wake up! Don’t take your life, and life in general, for granted. Don’t take?anything?for granted. Think, consider, and live outside of your habitual ways." I explained this to my client and we spent the rest of the session exploring ways to bring a new perspective to things.??

No matter how you feel about your current situation, be it at home or at work, your whole life is right here, right now. Have you recently paid conscious attention to the simple and obvious parts of your life that you may be overlooking? Have you considered what is working, what brings you joy, as well as what you avoid, what annoys and angers you? This is not about avoiding or ignoring all that is challenging and painful. It’s a way of including what’s working and what is possible. Just as the teacher used what was directly in front of him,?how do you work with what is right in front of you?

For me, that "rhinoceros energy" is seeing that I have a choice about how I respond in situations, and noticing that each choice impacts my state of mind and my actions. This is true in all parts of my life. I now have an 8-month old baby living in my house. Hearing the sound of a baby crying can be annoying or it can be beautiful, and it’s just a sound. I can choose my response,?when I’m paying attention. Working with my consulting clients can be challenging and stressful, or challenging and an opportunity to learn and grow. It all depends on how I attend to the energy I’m experiencing, and how I choose to channel it.

Some practices:

  • How do you choose (or not choose) your response – to sounds, to events, and conversations?
  • Write about or reflect on what brings you joy; what makes you most alive.??
  • Describe a particular event or situation that made you smile, laugh, and that surprised you.?

Angela Dobberfuhl

Mindful L&D Leader | Expert in Learning Tech-LMS-Articulate 360-Adobe CC | Empowering Growth through Learning | Crafting Learning for Heart and Mind | Innovative Instructional Designer

1 年

Thanks for the reminder, Marc Lesser. Accepting that joy and frustration are living together in the surprising moment of now. It reminds me of your analogies in Finding Clarity-The curiosity of Alice can find the surprise and overcome the Homer mindset!

回复
Scott Shute

Keynote Speaker | Conscious Business Activist | Former LinkedIn Exec

1 年

Thanks @Marc. Love it. So many overlaps w my life. (My book has an orange Rhino on the front cover...and it's about how to find / cultivate / allow Joy). Thanks for shining your light so brightly.

回复
Jessica Yarbrough

Business Consultant to Sell 6 Figure Packages | Growth Strategist for 6-Figure Coaches & Consultants Who Want to Scale to 7 Figures | Marketing Coach & Business Mentor | Build & Scale an Expert Business | LinkedIn Expert

1 年

Thank you for sharing this perspective.

回复
Carson D. Kelly

Compassion as a Business Practice | ROI of Care | Science of Flourishing | Organizational Mental Well-Being | Investor

1 年

Thank you Marc.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Marc Lesser的更多文章

  • 3 Questions to Ask Yourself When Making a Career Decision

    3 Questions to Ask Yourself When Making a Career Decision

    When I am faced with a career decision or question, or when I’m deciding whether or not to pursue or accept a new…

    2 条评论
  • Wisdom is Knowing What to Do

    Wisdom is Knowing What to Do

    Brush Dance, the publishing company I began many years ago, once published a greeting card that says, "Wisdom is…

  • 3 Things to Do Every Day at Work

    3 Things to Do Every Day at Work

    Many years ago, when I was CEO of Brush Dance, my wife asked me to give her the names of some graphic designers and to…

  • Seeing Ourselves and the World With Fresh Eyes

    Seeing Ourselves and the World With Fresh Eyes

    Living at Tassajara, Zen Mountain Center in the middle of a wilderness area provided me with numerous lessons on giving…

  • Connect to the Pain of Others

    Connect to the Pain of Others

    When leading trainings in the business world, or really anywhere, I’m often reminded that being a human being is a…

  • Manage Your Energy Like Your Life Depended on It

    Manage Your Energy Like Your Life Depended on It

    Right now my life is just one learning experience after another. By the end of the week I should be a genius.

    2 条评论
  • It Takes Patience to Accept the Truth

    It Takes Patience to Accept the Truth

    I was the CEO of Brush Dance for more than fifteen years. When I look back at the initial business plan that I wrote in…

    1 条评论
  • Accomplishing More by Doing Less

    Accomplishing More by Doing Less

    I was surprised, honored, and intimidated when I was asked to be the Tassajara summer bread baker. I had some baking…

  • Generosity

    Generosity

    “There is a time when the mind transforms things, and there is giving in which things transform the mind.” –Zen teacher…

  • What Wrestling Taught Me About Zen and the Practice of Concentration

    What Wrestling Taught Me About Zen and the Practice of Concentration

    I was captain of my high school wrestling team during my senior year of Colonia High School in north-central New…

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了