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Monday, October 26, 2015

The Stress Doc’s Resiliency Poetry: UNDERage: A Father’s Volcano – Part I

Dealing with a cauldron of grief emotions triggers poetic reflection on past and present, hot and cold rage.  What really underlies the fire and ice, the sound and the fury?  In Part I, “UNDERage:  A Father’s Volcano,” the Stress Doc ™ explores a past family drama, fueled by shameful trauma (a father’s fifteen years of unspoken and likely unnecessary shock therapy along with radiating effects) within and between father and son.  And what it may take to break out of such secretive, toxic binds.  In Part II, “, “UNDERage:  A Son’s Iceberg,” the Doc captures how “hot ice” rage numbs personal sadness about love lost and seemingly freezes tenderness toward a former lover. Prolonged, at some point, this open-wound iceberg rage, shadow-inducing frost on the surface, blocking out stormy currents below, may pose Shakespearean danger:  There is a tide in the affairs of men (and women) which taken at the flood leads on to fortune.  Omitted, all the voyages of their lives are bound in shallows and in miseries!


The Stress Doc’s Resiliency Poetry:
UNDERage:  A Father’s Volcano – Part I

The Volcano

My father’s rage
Never did fully age.
But now spewing volcanic steam
The gathering rumble toward Edvard Munch’s “Scream.”
Throwing up lava rocks…still
Better than the fears and years
Of mind-numbing shocks.

Me:  asking tough questions
About ECT, alleged bipolarity
About who are you…who me?
He:  Keep Off the Brain!
Away from a gated ghetto memory lane.
Forget using my unspoken guilt
To weave your remembrance quilt.

Somehow not scared away
From the smoke and the roar
His vulnerable core
That pushed him to the edge…
A hunger for knowledge
Breaking down my locked recall door.

Poised to commit family sin
Bring on the fire and brim
Stonewall no more
Damn, let go…jump in.
Who would make an ash of himself?
Who cares…No more stealth!

Two Titans at war
No need to keep score.
But when I didn’t cave
In the face of rant and rave
Despite owning my demons
Of childhood seasons
Oft bowed, muted, and frozen…
Who knows rhyme or reason?
In this fight to the light test
Trauma flashes laid to rest
In that old family grave
Now a born-again battlefield:
The home of the brave!

The red hot button stream
Cries from dad’s endless bad dream:
Hanging on by life’s thread
Medical wires to the head
A secret would hover
So much undercover…
Is it a shock to want to be dead?

Last chance…implode or explode
Just rip off the cathode.
Stop the hand-wringing wrath
Now exposed as a relic –
A dead-end subterranean path.
Wait…a smoldering magma spring
The healing fountain of shame?
(This is no ironic reframe)
For wherever you live – below or above
The dark veil of shame has no name to speak of
But your reborn rite of passage
As you stumble and crawl through that tunnel of love.

His wall of rage starts to shake
A mask that seemed never to break
No match for this father-son quake.
Eyes start to water
Tear down those borders.

Pulling his head to my shoulder
“Let it out”; scream and shout
Eons of self-doubt
It’s a load, but for me not a boulder.
No more need to save face
Wrapped in my embrace
Lava love flowed from my arms:
To purify Pandora Box wounds
Ignite mythic brain storms!

Back then…all the fury without sounds
Flying under the radar, no evil Vader
More silent darts seeping into heads and hearts.
Putting to sleep eyes and ears
After all these years
Finally to be cleansed
By our waterfall tears.

Mark Gorkin, MSW, LICSW, "The Stress Doc" ™, a nationally acclaimed speaker, writer, and "Psychohumorist" ™, is a former psychotherapist and Stress & Violence Prevention Consultant for the US Postal Service.  The Doc is a Trauma Debriefing and Critical Incident Consultant for variety of organizations, including the national post-earthquake, Nepali Behavioral Health & Wellness Initiative. He has led numerous transformative -- silo-breaking and communications bridge-building -- Pre-Deployment Stress Resilience-Humor-Team Building Retreats for US Army Senior Officers and Sergeants.  He also provides international Stress Resilience and Burnout Recovery Phone-Skype Coaching.
The Doc is the author of Practice Safe Stress:  Healing and Laughing in the Face of Stress, Burnout & Depression and The Four Faces of Anger:  Transforming Hostility and Rage into Assertion and Passion, and Resiliency Rap:  The Wit and Wisdom of the Stress Doc.  His award-winning, USA Today Online "HotSite"www.stressdoc.com – was called a "workplace resource" by National Public Radio (NPR).  Email stressdoc@aol.com for more info.

Monday, October 12, 2015

The Art of Letting Go: A CRE-iterative Process and Virtual Synergy Dynamic

Why should I be sending a streamlined version of my recent essay titled, Generating Virtual Synergy:  Turning the Iterative into the Creative?  Why the need to rework it?  To answer these questions, I must traverse the pragmatic to the psychological.  Hopefully such (psycho)-analysis will provide another window into the iterative process.

A concrete motivator was an editor of ORATE Speakers Bureau Website saying they are more carefully monitoring article length.  I was way over their new word ceiling, hence the “request”:  “We need you to reduce “Ten Tips” to “Five?”

The “Ten Tips” had generated some very positive feedback.  I even suggested dividing “Generating Virtual Synergy” into two parts.  The editor tactfully acknowledged this being a “wonderful idea”…but they still wanted a leaner version.

Okay, so my ego was a bit bruised.  You know the old adage:  Vanity thy name is Gorkin!  Actually, my two-part counter reflected a hard-earned understanding that major editing was not mere cosmetic surgery, a little nip and tuck.  And especially when enamored by almost all of my ideas and examples…which of the pearls must be grudgingly tossed back into the sea?  Yes, having to tear down and redesign one’s hand-crafted word artistry evoked a sense of loss – parts pride and artistic control – if not some short-lived grief.  (There’s a familiar voice inside:  C’mon get over it.)  And adding insult to injury…I was caught by my own recently coined maxim:  Keep It Short and Smart!

Stop Ruminating and Jump In

Not surprisingly, anticipation was worse than the actual “cut and paste” operation.  As the Ancient Roman poet and philosopher, Horace, avowed:  To begin is to be half done; dare to know – start!   The result of cutting and combining some of the ten steps and strategies as well as casting out several no-longer-so-precious-pearls…a more concentrated and punchy KISS!  In fact, tightening up the document led to tossing some abstract concepts while more concretely illustrating those left standing.

The trimmed down, “Five Steps and Strategies” version, was, IMHO, still a hearty spread, full of meaty chunks of ideas, learning points, and stories.  Was “Ten Tips” the equivalent of a belt-loosening ten-course oral orgy?  Ugh…anybody have some Alka-Seltzer?  If what was left out was truly essential, I could always write another essay; with the leftovers have another “food for thought” meal.  Right now, though, I’m feeling nicely sated!

Finally, I must recognize, with new-found humility, that the ORATE editor had extended and strengthened our iterative process and product – a sequence of operations yielding results successively closer to a desired result.  Please tell me your take:  IYHO, do we have a more efficient and hence effective, more synergistic outcome?
~~~~~~~~~~~~

The Stress Doc provides key steps, skills, and strategies for transforming a virtual problem-solving exchange into a CRE-iterative, synergy building and product-generating process.

Generating Virtual Synergy:  Turning the Iterative into the Creative
Key Steps and Strategies

Recently I met Dr. Terence Jackson, through a Linked-In intro.  Dr. J is an experienced Corporate Culture-Organizational Development-Business Strategist and Thought Leader.  While I’m a Motivational Speaker and Stress and Change Resilience, Anger and Conflict Management, and Team Building “Psychohumorist” ™, known as the “Stress Doc ™.  While Dr. Jackson lives in North Carolina and I'm based in Columbia, MD, we quickly began to virtually and conceptually groove. In fact, a fiery kindling of the minds soon sparked an “iterative process” through our dynamic exchange of emails and calls.  Our back-and-forth generation of content, suggested edits, encouragements, differences, resource links, etc., mirrored the Miriam-Webster Dictionary definition of iterative:  a procedure in which repetition of a sequence of operations yields results successively closer to a desired result...even, I would add, a divergent and unanticipated, if not novel, outcome or product.  In fact, our neologistic conceptual baby/program – Organizational Resilience & Rhythm:  Achieving High Tech & Human Touch Harmony (and Profitability) – was CRE-iterative!

The Mind- and Outcome-Expanding "Iterative" Process:  Five Key Steps and Strategies

What is it about the virtual-iterative experience that lends itself to all manner of problem-solving and product development?  If this question intrigues, get ready to discover how iterative arenas, pathways, and processes (“app”s, if you will) stimulate the Stress Doc’s enriched notion of “synergy”:  Not only will your product’s essence be greater than the sum of its parts…but parts just may magically transform into partners!

Consider these five key components of the back-and-forth electronic interplay of two individual and idiosyncratic minds:

1.  Division of Labor yet a Common Language.  From the outset, there was some role division:  Dr. J was more the conceptual generator, especially of macro- or systems-wide organizational issues, e.g. “Organizational Rhythm.” The Stress Doc was a writer-integrator weaving specific stress resilience-communication tools and concepts within the “big picture” framework.  One example, I added “Resilience” to Dr. J’s “Organizational Rhythm.”  To Dr. J’s emphasis on “Cultural Accountability” I amended “Authority” and “Autonomy,” i.e., yielding The Triple “A” – Authority, Autonomy and Accountability – of Organizational Responsibility and Resilience.  Our conceptual and experiential diversity, far from dividing us, increasingly vibrated a Yin/Yang sympathy.  A key factor:  we both spoke the language of “Emotional Intelligence.”  A common or complementary language means less time and energy is expended in “message sent equals message received.”  More important, it also facilitates the intuitive connection, that is, a capacity to quickly get the gist of what’s being expressed and/or to plumb unspoken or shadowy depths. Such a wavelength connection also generates an ability to listen and leap into analogical, mind-rippling, pathway-generating ideas and images

Of course, words and phrases may evoke multiple images and meaning.  When Dr. J talked “inclusion” his primary emphasis was maximizing the diverse talent, experience, and input among employees in the organization.  In contrast, my initial focus was more micro:  “inclusion” evoked the military phrase “helmets off,” that is, to hold a meeting where for a period of time there is no rank in the room; “right (or at least good reasoning) makes might,” and the Corporal gradually trusts that it’s safe to talk candidly even with the Colonel in view. 

2.  Evolve and Exchange Resources and a Working Goal.  Almost immediately Dr. J and I had a sense of the project – organizational development training/leadership retreat programs.  However, what a joint presentational system-program would look, sound, and taste like was still a mystery.  Early back and forth through email and an initial phone call definitely generated more questions than answers.  Finally, a phone dialogue was just the spark to grasp and grapple with Dr. J's purposeful concepts and passionate focus.  From “jazz riff rhythm” to “cultural accountability,” concepts had give-and-take resonance.  Of course, the speed at which information or links can be shared keeps the information sharing and idea swaying process fast if not furious.  And when a thesis is met by a counterpoint or antithesis…this often disturbs the status quo…and may motivate or set the stage for a concept-expanding synthesis.  A paradoxical challenge of this process:  fight for those issues or beliefs you believe critical yet be receptive to contradictory or challenging ideas; be willing to let go, at least temporarily.  (For example, a CEO once underscored his enigmatic learning-performance mantra:  Strive high and embrace failure!)  Conceding a battle does not mean the campaign is lost.  In similar fashion, alas, establishing a beachhead does not mean the island is conquered.  Sustaining a genuine back-and-forth, iterative process, just may determine the day!

3.  Vive la Difference!  I recall a late 20th c. problem-solving study involving submarine personnel.  The most salient outcome:  the teams that had the most heterogeneous-culturally diverse groupings invariably came up with the most creative solutions.  While quick to achieve a solution, the homogeneous process-product tended toward the one-dimensional; agreement was reached too easily.  The more diverse teams had to grapple with difference and even conflict; they had to allow and learn from and reconcile divergent viewpoints and the competition of ideas.  While conflict-driven problem-solving requires greater time and energy, these groups produced a more truly collaborative, multifaceted, expansive, and effective problem-solving synthesis.  As John Dewey, the 19th c. pragmatic philosopher and “Father of American Public Education” observed:

Conflict is the gadfly of thought.  It stirs us to observation and memory.  It shocks us out of sheep-like passivity.  It instigates to invention and sets us to noting and contriving.  Conflict is the sine qua non of reflection and ingenuity!

4.  Allow Values-Driven Issues to Build Understanding and Trust.  In an iterative process, with two passionate- and purpose-driven individuals, it’s vital to distinguish when fighting for an idea is or is not critical.  It may be preferable to concede a battle to sustain iterative and integrative give-and-take.  Unless repeatedly hitting a negotiation wall, the goal is to continue as allies in the greater war/project effort. Retreating not only allows opportunity to lick wounds but may facilitate toughening a “thin skin”; most important, it also provides time and space for conceptual battle seeds to germinate in one or both parties’ minds.  I recall our exchanging messages about the recent NY Times report on the very demanding if not possibly corrosive workplace culture at Amazon.  It reminded me of the label for the 24/7, 6000 person workfloor at a US Postal Service Processing & Distribution Plant:  “The Postal Plantation.”  (I had been a USPS Stress & Violence Prevention Consultant in the ‘90s.)  Perhaps Amazon was now inviting its own sobriquet:  “The High Tech Plantation!”  Dr. J had a strong reaction to my provocative cultural metaphor:  “Nobody was losing their life at Amazon.  Folks could leave the Amazon plantation if they had enough.”  As an African-American he thought I was trivializing the horrific, culturally devastating, too often mind-body and family-crushing experience of slavery.

I was taken aback by the intense rejoinder while also questioning my own cultural sensitivity.  (Upon reflection, I certainly have a visceral reaction when believing the Jewish Holocaust of WWII is being trivialized.)  Though still somewhat enamored of the metaphoric marker, mulling over my own and my partner’s perspective, I emailed saying that I could let go of the terminology.  In turn, Dr. J indicated that wasn’t necessary.  He just wanted to affirm his cultural-historical vantage point, a value which touched his core.  In some ways, this exchange was a test of our willingness to give and take culturally.  In addition to the outcome of my more intimate understanding, I believe we both emerged with a greater sense of trust in both the person and the process.

5.  The Lennon-McCartney Effect.  Reading a biography of Paul McCartney of the Beatles is helping to shape my thinking on this essay.  John Lennon was often deep and dark, if not an angry and cynical hard rocker; Paul tended to be breezier, pop-friendly, and engaging.  Yet, Paul could profoundly touch your heart with such songs as “Yesterday” and ”Let It Be” while John could inspire with “Imagine” or “Give Peace a Chance.”  They were each other’s’ toughest critics when Paul’s lyrics were too sappy or John’s music was too grungy.  And despite their differences there were profound commonalities:  In addition to their idiosyncratic genius and being awash in both the musical culture of Liverpool and the African-American/Southern roots of US “Rock and Roll,” together they developed their musical chops by the rough and tumble Hamburg, Germany wharves.  In their own way, each was driven and ambitious, yet also possessed a sly sense of humor.  Perhaps most poignantly, they both had lost mothers during their teen years.  The bottom-line message is not that iteration requires genius, but that differences and commonalities, along with heart- and soul-shaping life experiences, all seed and spice the creative stew.  Steadily bring your full self to the give and take.  The “how to” lesson for this CRE-iterative essay:  play to your strengths, share resources, be flexible with roles and focus, and be open to and daring with new ideas and viewpoints.  Let conflict and criticism push your conceptual boundaries more than your emotionally charged buttons.  Gradually build trust.  Find an inquisitive and responsive partner who will provide the Stress Doc’s TLC:  Tender Loving Criticism and Tough Loving Care


Are you ready to find such a partner and go back and forth for it?

Mark Gorkin, MSW, LICSW, "The Stress Doc" ™, a nationally acclaimed speaker, writer, and "Psychohumorist" ™, is a former psychotherapist and Stress & Violence Prevention Consultant for the US Postal Service.  The Doc is a Trauma Debriefing and Critical Incident Consultant for variety of organizations, including the national post-earthquake, Nepali Behavioral Health & Wellness Initiative. He has led numerous transformative -- silo-breaking and communications bridge-building -- Pre-Deployment Stress Resilience-Humor-Team Building Retreats for US Army Senior Officers and Sergeants.  He also provides international Stress Resilience and Burnout Recovery Phone-Skype Coaching.
The Doc is the author of Practice Safe Stress:  Healing and Laughing in the Face of Stress, Burnout & Depression and The Four Faces of Anger:  Transforming Hostility and Rage into Assertion and Passion, and Resiliency Rap:  The Wit and Wisdom of the Stress Doc.  His award-winning, USA Today Online "HotSite"www.stressdoc.com – was called a "workplace resource" by National Public Radio (NPR).  Email stressdoc@aol.com for more info.

Thursday, October 8, 2015

Empowering the Caregiver Retreat: Sat Nov 7th, in Stony Brook, Long Island, NY

The Stress Doc has banded together with a group of allied health and homecare professionals to launch the first of a series of events to Empower the Caregiver.  (See our flier both attached and below and my presentational blurb and objectives outline.) I met the CEO of Angel Home Care at a Busy Women's Retreat a few years back.  A dedicated professional, Ann-Marie wants to increase community awareness of the challenge of being a caregiver and the critical value of home care services...Towards this end, she has enlisted myself, a mind-body nutritionist, and a Medicaid expert to engage with and enlighten retreat participants.
 
If the caregiving experience -- past-present-future -- is on your mind or in your heart...do email or give me a call.
 
Mark Gorkin, MSW, LICSW
The Stress Doc ™
Stress, Change & Leader Resilience Speaking, Coaching
Crisis & Critical Incident Intervention-Consultation
Burnout-Bullying/Conflict-Grief Counseling
Telephone--Skype-In-Person
301-875-2567

stressdoc@aol.com<>www.stressdoc.com

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Busy Women's Retreat
at Blue Mountain Retreat Center/Harper's Ferry, WV
March 14, 2010

Mark,

Thank you so much for giving such a meaningful presentation at the Busy Women's Retreat here at Blue Mountain on March 5th and 6th. The subject matter, "Transforming Stress, Conflict and Change into Passion Power" was itself a very powerful theme, and you were able to so skillfully present and guide the group! This subject brought a lot of heavy emotions from the women to the surface. Your ability to help the women work through their issues, and even more importantly, your ability to give them tools with which to transform their stress was truly amazing. The participants in the retreat told me personally that they were very impressed with the way that you managed the group and that they took away many things that they can use in their everyday life. Your presentation helped them to evaluate their stressors differently, to see the positive in every stress, conflict and/or change. Moreover, you helped them to realize they are not alone, and you were so skilled at allowing and encouraging others to give feedback within the group!I am just so impressed with your organization, your presentation and your professionalism. I will certainly hire you again, and the women in this first group all said they look forward to working with you again at a future gathering! Thank you for your time, effort, intelligence and caring. You are truly a gifted workshop leader!!

Beth Ehrhardt, Owner
Blue Mountain Retreat Center
Knoxville, MD 21758

beth6mt@hotmail.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

We invite you to attend our one day workshop featuring:
November 7, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm
Corn
Make the TRANSFORMATION
·      From depleted to POWERFUL
·      From isolated to SUPPORTED
·      From unaware to KNOWLEDGEABLE
Leaf
Leaf
 
 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Caring for Life and Taking Care to Live:  Skills, Steps, and Strategies for Empowering the Caregiver
Caring for the person who long ago nurtured and cared for you is an undertaking filled with meaningful and also mournful moments.  Over time, this intense experience can generate emotions that are hard for a caregiver to express, especially when feeling love- and honor-bound.  Which only adds pressure to one of the highest stress-generating roles:  you’re always on duty and often feel guilt-ridden – whether it’s because you believe you should be doing more or feel guilty because you feel angry for all you are doing.   And in the process, you can feel isolated, even start losing your own sense of identity.  Did anyone say STRESS?
Still, have no fear, (well maybe a little), Mark Gorkin, MSW, LICSW, acclaimed speaker, author, and “Psychohumorist,” The Stress Doc ™, is here.  The Doc helps audiences Get FIT through his FUN-Interactive-Thought-provoking programs.  Quickly gain tools for recognizing signs of burnout, and for reversing this exhausting, life-draining cycle.  Learn to “let go” and to overcome self-defeating power struggles.  Design your own balance of giving of yourself and giving to yourself!  And most important, Mark creates a safe and intimate atmosphere for participants to share their stories and learn from one another.
Seek the higher power of Stress Doc humor:  May the Farce Be with You!
Don’t miss tour appointment with the Stress Doc.

Objectives/Outline
1.  Engage in the Doc’s “Three ‘B” Stress Barometer Exercise”
2.  Discover why “Letting go” is such a challenge…and how to begin the process
3.  Transform self-defeating power struggles by asking courageous “good” and trust-building questions
4.  Share personal stories and learn to find your voice and balance
5.  Use humor and common humanity to “Confront Your Intimate FOE”

Mark Gorkin, MSW, LICSW, "The Stress Doc" ™, a nationally acclaimed speaker, writer, and "Psychohumorist" ™, is a former psychotherapist and Stress & Violence Prevention Consultant for the US Postal Service.  The Doc is a Trauma Debriefing and Critical Incident Consultant for variety of organizations, including the national post-earthquake, Nepali Behavioral Health & Wellness Initiative. He has led numerous transformative -- silo-breaking and communications bridge-building -- Pre-Deployment Stress Resilience-Humor-Team Building Retreats for US Army Senior Officers and Sergeants.  He also provides international Stress Resilience and Burnout Recovery Phone-Skype Coaching.
The Doc is the author of Practice Safe Stress:  Healing and Laughing in the Face of Stress, Burnout & Depression and The Four Faces of Anger:  Transforming Hostility and Rage into Assertion and Passion, and Resiliency Rap:  The Wit and Wisdom of the Stress Doc.  His award-winning, USA Today Online "HotSite"www.stressdoc.com – was called a "workplace resource" by National Public Radio (NPR).  Email stressdoc@aol.com for more info.
 
Mark Gorkin, MSW, LICSW
The Stress Doc ™


Stress, Change & Leader Resilience Speaking, Coaching
Crisis & Critical Incident Intervention-Consultation
Burnout-Bullying/Conflict-Grief Counseling
Telephone--Skype-In-Person

301-875-2567

stressdoc@aol.com<>www.stressdoc.com

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Thursday, October 1, 2015

Generating Virtual Synergy: Turning the Iterative into the Creative -- Top Ten Steps and Strategies

The Stress Doc provides key steps, skills, and strategies for transforming a virtual problem-solving
exchange into a CRE-iterative, synergy building and product-generating process.

Generating Virtual Synergy:  Turning the Iterative into the Creative
Top Ten Steps and Strategies

Recently I met Dr. Terence Jackson, through a Linked-In intro.  Dr. J is an experienced Corporate Culture-Organizational Development-Business Strategist and Thought Leader, based in North Carolina.  While I’m a Motivational Speaker and Stress and Change Resilience, Anger and Conflict Management, and Team Building “Psychohumorist” ™, known as the “Stress Doc ™, living in Columbia, MD.  Quickly we began to virtually and conceptually groove.  In fact, a fiery kindling of the minds soon sparked an “iterative process.”  According to the Miriam-Webster Dictionary, iterative is a procedure in which repetition of a sequence of operations yields results successively closer to a desired result...even, I would add, a divergent and unanticipated, if not novel, outcome or product.  In fact, our neologistic conceptual baby was CRE-iterative!

The Mind- and Outcome-Expanding "Iterative" Process

What is it about the virtual experience that lends itself to all manner of problem-solving and product development?  Consider these ten key components of the back-and- forth electronic interplay of two individual and idiosyncratic minds.  Our synergistic offspring is a “Dr. J and the Stress Doc” original program – keynote, workshop, retreat, or seminar series:

Organizational Resilience & Rhythm:  A Creative & Collaborative Model and System – Achieving High Tech & Human Touch Harmony (and Profitability); see below.

What iterative arenas, pathways, and processes (apps, if you will) await the entry of you and a partner or you and team members?  Are you ready to create Stress Doc synergy?  Not only will your product’s essence be greater than the sum of its parts…but parts just may magically transform into partners!

"The Top Ten Steps and Strategies, Tools and Techniques of a CRE-iterative Process":  

1.  Dynamic Division of Labor.  From the outset, there was some role division:  Dr. J was more the conceptual generator, especially of macro- or systems-wide organizational issues, e.g. “Organizational Rhythm.” The Stress Doc was a writer-integrator weaving specific stress resilience-communication tools and concepts within the “big picture” framework.  One example, I added “Resilience” to Dr. J’s “Organizational Rhythm.”  To Dr. J’s emphasis on “Cultural Accountability” I amended “Authority” and “Autonomy,” i.e., yielding The Triple “A” – Authority, Autonomy & Accountability – of Organizational Responsibility & Resilience.  Our conceptual and experiential diversity, far from dividing us, increasingly vibrated a Yin/Yang sympathy.  And with give and take, roles flexibly evolve – sometimes a mentor/coach, other times a mentee/learner…yet always within a working, “helmet’s off” – no rank in the room – partnership. 

2.  Talk a Common Language.  Dr. J was fluent in systems-organizational terminology; I had at least a working knowledge and would ask for clarification or elaboration as needed.  However, we both were fluent in the realm of “Emotional Intelligence.”  I also resonated with his distinction between "change" (external, physical, and reversible) and "transformation" (internal, psychological, and bringing to life a new entity). Of course, words and phrases may evoke multiple images and meaning.  When Dr. J talked inclusion his primary emphasis was maximizing the diversity talent, experience, and input among employees in the organization.  In contrast, my initial focus was more micro:  inclusion evoked the military phrase “helmets off,” that is, to hold a meeting where for a period of time there is no rank in the room; “right (or at least good reasoning) makes might,” and the Corporal can talk freely to the Colonel.  (Some military leaders wisely brought in a professional team facilitator realizing they needed help to “walk a more candid, non-status-driven talk.”)

A common or complementary language means less time and energy is expended in “message sent equals message received.”  More important, it also facilitates the intuitive connection, that is, a capacity to quickly get the gist of what’s being expressed and/or to plumb unspoken or shadowy depths. Such a wavelength connection also generates an ability to listen and leap into analogical, mind-rippling, pathway-generating ideas and images.

3.  Evolve a Working Goal.  Almost immediately Dr. J and I had a sense of the project – organizational development training/leadership retreat programs.  (See program Objectives/Outline below.)  However, “what a joint presentational system-program would look, sound, and taste like was still a mystery."  Early back and forth through email and an initial phone call definitely generated more questions than answers.  Finally, a phone dialogue was just the spark to glean Dr. J's purposeful concepts and passionate focus:  his system terms resonated with my conception of creative communication and synergy – "culture," "jazz riff rhythm," and "improvisation"; so too "generating harmony by maxing the input and talents found in employee diversity" along with bedrock (and bottom line) ideas of "accountability" "transparency" & "trust".  (AT&T anybody?  In addition, we both are charter members of that new AA group – “Acronyms Anonymous.”) 

4.  Exchange and Lobby for Conceptual Paths and Resources.  One wonder of the virtual world is the speed at which information can be shared.  Whether it was an article on “Iteration,” “Creative Process,” or “Values and Accountability,” Dr. J would pass along material that would further my understanding.  On occasion I reciprocated.  The relevance and usefulness of the resource was enhanced by its immediacy.  In addition to this coaching element, the project and process focused my mindset; so many things suddenly had CRE-iterative possibility.  Of course, we were also lobbying for our personal points of view.  One paradoxical challenge of this process:  fight for those issues or beliefs you believe critical yet be receptive to contradictory or challenging ideas; be willing to let go, at least temporarily.  Conceding a battle does not mean the campaign is lost.  In similar fashion, alas, establishing a beachhead does not mean the island is conquered.  Acclaimed author, F. Scott Fitzgerald, has articulated what many in the arts and sciences have observed:

The test of a first rate intellect is the capacity to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function!

5.  Open to Feedback; Open to the Other.  A cardinal principle of iteration is analogous to my concept of the “key pillars of a good listener”:  the openness pillar and the humility pillar.  One must be willing to stretch one’s mind with new information or an unconsidered perspective.  And being humble means realizing you don't have all the answers and can learn from all manner of people and points of view.  There should be optimal competition and difference between the minds:  enough to avoid premature agreement and not so much that it leads to conceptual stonewalling or silo-building.  We also tried striking a dynamic balance between the theoretical and the applied.  Outcome not ego must be the driver; as the Stress Doc avows:  be goal-directed not pushed or pulled by a swollen head or wounded pride, that is, egoal-driven!

6.  Vive la Difference!  I recall a late 20th c. problem-solving study involving submarine personnel.  The most salient outcome:  the teams that had the most heterogeneous-culturally diverse groupings invariably came up with the most creative solutions.  While quick to achieve a solution, the homogeneous process-product tended toward the one-dimensional; agreement was reached too easily.  The more diverse teams had to grapple with difference and even conflict; while requiring more time, these groups produced a more truly collaborative, multifaceted, expansive, and effective problem-solving synthesis.  As John Dewey, the 19th c. pragmatic philosopher and “Father of American Public Education” observed:

Conflict is the gadfly of thought.  It stirs us to observation and memory.  It shocks us out of sheep-like passivity.  It instigates to invention and sets us to noting and contriving.  Conflict is the sine qua non of reflection and ingenuity!

7.  Fight, Retreat, and Reflect.  With two passionate- and purpose-driven individuals in an iterative process it’s vital to distinguish when fighting for an idea is or is not critical.  It may be preferable to concede a relatively small battle to sustain iterative and integrative give and take to continue as allies in the greater war/project effort.  As noted above, there are some core issues worth fighting for before smartly dancing around the ring, i.e., strategically stalling for time, or returning to one’s corner.  (And sometimes it’s wise to obtain a second opinion on what’s worth fighting for.)  “Dropping the tug-of-war rope” is a viable option when both parties know they can reflect upon and revisit the contentious issue.  Retreating not only allows opportunity to lick wounds but facilitates toughening a “thin skin”; it also provides time and space for conceptual battle seeds to germinate in one or both parties’ minds.  And this back and forth, fighting and retreating, can be relationship-building, especially when another Stress Doc maxim is kept in mind:  Difference and Disagreement =/= Disapproval or Disloyalty!

8.  Allow Conflict to Build Understanding and Trust.  I recall our exchanging messages about the recent NY Times report on the very demanding if not possibly aversive workplace culture at Amazon.  It reminded me of the label for the 24/7, 6000 person workfloor at a US Postal Service Processing & Distribution Plant:  “The Postal Plantation.”  (I had been a USPS Stress & Violence Prevention Consultant in the ‘90s.)  Perhaps Amazon was now inviting its own sobriquet:  “The High Tech Plantation!”  Dr. J had a strong reaction to my provocative cultural metaphor:  “Nobody was losing their life at Amazon.  Folks could leave the Amazon plantation if they had enough.”  As an African-American he thought I was trivializing the horrific, culturally devastating, too often mind- and body crushing experience of slavery.  I was taken aback by the intense rejoinder while also questioning my own cultural sensitivity.  (Yet, upon reflection, I certainly have a visceral reaction when believing the Jewish Holocaust of WWII is being trivialized.)  Though still somewhat enamored of the metaphoric marker, reflecting on my own and my partner’s perspective, I emailed saying that I could let go of the terminology.  In turn, Dr. J indicated that wasn’t necessary.  He just wanted to affirm his cultural-historical vantage point, a value which touched his core.  In some ways, this exchange was a test of our willingness to give and take culturally.  In addition to the outcome of my more intimate understanding, I believe we both emerged with a greater sense of trust in both the person and the process.

9.  Overcome Fear of Error or Failure.  An iterative process needs to be parts reflective and instinctive; don’t hold onto ideas until they are perfectly polished.  In fact, some raw edges enable others to grab on, to play and run with an idea.  Being a creative catalyst earns points in my iterative book.  Short term there may not be support or confirmation of your efforts/ideas; yet, down the back and forth path, unexpected developments may open up heretofore shadowy detours and iterative connections.  Or ideas may be streamlined – becoming leaner and keener.  To paraphrase Mark Twain:  Insight “is the sudden marriage of ideas which before their union were not perceived to have any relation.”  And the first step of insight is often risk-taking experimentation and exploration.  So “Confront the Intimate FOE:  Fear of Exposure.”  Remember, “Either Learn to Fail or Fail to Learn.”  And it doesn’t always have to be daunting, draining, or dire.  As Winston Churchill noted, “Success is stumbling from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm.” 

10.  The Lennon-McCartney Effect.  Reading a biography of Paul McCartney of the Beatles is helping to shape my thinking on this essay.  John Lennon was often deep and dark, if not an angry and cynical hard rocker; Paul tended to be breezier, pop-friendly, and engaging.  Yet, Paul could profoundly touch your heart with such songs as “Yesterday” and ”Let It Be” while John could inspire with “Imagine” or Give Peace a Chance.”  And they were each other’s’ toughest critics when Paul’s lyrics were too sappy or John’s music was too grungy.  And despite their differences there were profound commonalities:  In addition to their idiosyncratic genius and being awash in both the musical culture of Liverpool and the African-American/Southern roots of US “Rock and Roll,” together they developed their musical chops by the rough and tumble Hamburg, Germany wharves.  In their own way, each had a sly sense of humor.  Perhaps most poignantly, they both had lost mothers during their teen years.  The bottom-line message is not that iteration requires genius, but that differences and commonalities, along with life experiences, all feed the creative stew.  Steadily bring your full self to the give and take.  The lesson for this CRE-iterative essay:  play to your strengths, share resources, be flexible with roles and focus, and be open to and daring with new ideas and viewpoints.  Let conflict and criticism push your conceptual boundaries more than your emotionally charged buttons.  Gradually build trust.  Find an inquisitive partner who will provide the Stress Doc’s TLC:  Tender Loving Criticism and Tough Loving Care

Are you ready to find such a partner and go back and forth for it?
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Addendum

Organizational Resilience & Rhythm:  A Creative & Collaborative Model and System -- Achieving High Tech & Human Touch Harmony (and Profitability)


In a 24/7, TNT -- Time-Numbers-Technology -- driven and distracted work world -- three pillars are essential to support your company's mission.   During times of stress, uncertainty, and change:

1) are your leaders, employees, and teams resilient; can they bounce back from those challenging "abc"s -- adversity, burnout, or conflict?; can they genuinely grapple with and grow from change?; does your organization and culture understand the difference between "change" and "transformation?"

2) do your network of leaders, individuals, and teams communicate and resolve conflict in an open and transparent manner?; do these communication processes help strengthen cognitive diversity and remove status barriers to substantial engagement?; is your organizational culture one of "Accountability," modeled by a leadership network that energizes and inspires employees, heightens personal and team responsibility, and becomes the foundation for building trust?
3) is your company creating a "helmet's off" and inclusive climate, i.e., are all voices and viewpoints at all levels able to meaningfully contribute to mission-critical problem-solving, i.e., status no longer stifles the free flow of ideas?; does your culture encourage "improvisation":  when input and ideas, processes and programs may be critiqued, explored, and even field tested by vital system -- internal and external partners?

When leaders set and model this flexible focus and flow, when individuals, teams, leaders, and systems  discover and design their own unique sense of TIME:  Transformation-Inspiration-Motivation-Empowerment...you are into the new "R & R" -- Resilience & Rhythm -- and are blazing the creative and collaborative path of Organizational Harmony!

Program Objectives

  • Building Stress Resilience, the Triple "A," and Burnout Prevention
  • Turning Operational Change into Organizational Transformation
  • Communication Flow and a "Rhythmic" Conflict Resolution Dance
  • On Becoming a Transformative and "CRE-iterative"™ Leader
  • Designing Diversity and Team Rhythm = Driving Performance Harmony
  • Creating the Path of TIME and Organizational Harmony

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Upon completing this "Get FIT" -- FUN-Interactive-Thought-provoking -- program participants will:

A.  Building Stress Resilience and Burnout Prevention

1.  Rapidly Identify "Brain-Body-Behavior" Stress Smoke Signals
2.  Discover the Four Stages of Burnout; and the research-tested steps to prevent burnout and aid recovery and resilience

B.  Turning Operational Change into Organizational Transformation

1.  Understand and Overcome Resistance to Change; discover empathic and strategic process of "grief to growth" evolution
2.  Grasp the Essential Difference between Change and Transformation

C.  Generating Communication Flow and a "Rhythmic" Conflict Resolution Dance

1.  Disarm Power Struggles by Asking Courageous, Trust- & Respect-building "Good Questions"
2.  Practice Communication, Collaboration, and Reflective Listening Tools and Techniques for Hearing, Understanding, and Synergizing; Are You Being Heard...or Just Making Noise?

D.  On Becoming a Transformative Leader

1.  How the Transformative Leader Sets the Flow of Accountability, Authenticity, Intuition, Complexity, and CRE-iterative Process and Product that Awakens and Captures an Audience
2.  Discover and Apply the "Passion Power" Model:  Bringing Your Most Creative-Compelling Energy and Essence

E.  Designing Team Rhythm and Harmony

1.  Discovering the Creatively Rhythmic "I" in Team:  Cultivating "CRE-iterative Individuality" and "Interactive Community"
2.  Engaging in 3 "D" -- Discussion-Drawing-Diversity -- Status Barrier-Breaking and Team Building Exercises

F.  Creating the Path of TIME and Organizational Harmony

1.  Tools and Techniques for High Engagement Leadership Networks, Teams, and Cross-Systems Coordination; "See through the 'Box'...Design Your Own Curve"
2.  Developing TIME-less Leaders and Organizations:  Transform-Inspire-Motivate-Empower

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Terry Jackson_2.5x3.5.jpg

Terry Jackson is a highly accomplished, experienced and dynamic Executive Advisor, Thought Leader, Solutions Facilitator, Leadership Development Advisor, Sales Advisor and Organizational Consultant.  Holding a Ph.D. in Leadership and Organizational Change, Dr. Jackson's passion and purpose:   helping others evolve mindsets and skill sets, thereby expanding personal and professional performance excellence!
Terry is a visionary with 25+ years of progressive leadership success in catapulting sales, expanding existing markets -- driving market penetration and client revenue -- building strategic business relationships, and developing staff to achieve client and corporate goals, both for startups and Fortune 500 companies.  His experience includes:  P&L management, new product launches, territory turnarounds, brand management, contract negotiations, auditing, people development, and several process improvement methodologies.
Terry has led large scale consulting and coaching engagements in the following industries: Education, Financial, Petroleum, Telecommunications, State and Federal Government, Retail and Consumer Package Goods.  An authority in Emotional Intelligence, he uses conceptual understanding and "hands on" application to create and sustain uncommonly high levels of leadership and employee engagement and performance.
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Mark Gorkin, MSW, LICSW, "The Stress Doc" ™, a nationally acclaimed speaker, writer, and "Psychohumorist"  ™, is a former psychotherapist and Stress & Violence Prevention Consultant for the US Postal Service.  The Doc is a Trauma Debriefing and Critical Incident Consultant for variety of organizations, including the national post-earthquake, Nepali Behavioral Health & Wellness Initiative. He has led numerous transformative -- silo-breaking and communications bridge-building -- Pre-Deployment Stress Resilience-Humor-Team Building Retreats for US Army Senior Officers and Sergeants.
From a Ft. Hood Brigade Commander:  Your (Command Offsite) session on managing change and stress was the perfect lead-in to the work we had to accomplish throughout the conference.  It set the conditions for the free, uninhibited work (regardless of rank). Here's the BLUF: Your session was the critical building block on which we built the rest of the conference.  The Doc is the author of Practice Safe Stress:  Healing and Laughing in the Face of Stress, Burnout & Depression and The Four Faces of Anger:  Transforming Hostility and Rage into Assertion and Passion.   The Stress Doc blog appears in such platforms as HR.com and WorkforceWeek.com.  His award-winning, USA Today Online "HotSite"www.stressdoc.com – was called a "workplace resource" by National Public Radio (NPR).  As SHRM and IPMA-HR Program Chairs recently noted, Mark has a way of captivating an audience and makes them want to hear more...Take a passionate and creative ride with the Stress Doc!

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Mark Gorkin, MSW, LICSW
The Stress Doc ™


Stress, Change & Leader Resilience Speaking, Coaching
Crisis & Critical Incident Intervention-Consultation
Burnout-Bullying/Conflict-Grief Counseling
Telephone--Skype-In-Person

301-875-2567

stressdoc@aol.com<>www.stressdoc.com

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Orate Speakers Bureau (video links) Click here: Find Your Next Speaker
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Stress Doc
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Speaking & Educational Videos-Essays
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Google blog: http://www.blogger.com/home

2.5 min 3 Steps to Overcome Procrastination Video -- http://vimeo.com/73783964
2 min Shrink Rap Video Link: https://vimeo.com/69053828
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