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Showing posts with label Failure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Failure. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

A Mistake Is but an Error: An Ironic-Poetic Odyssey for Human Authenticity and Audacity

Recently I came across a quote that captured my attention:  “An error is only a mistake if you don’t correct it.”  I liked its recognition of our less than perfect humanity.  (This becomes more salient with an aging mind.)  In addition, the aphorism affirms that it’s not always the initial action that’s critical; one’s ability to respond effectively to subsequent feedback often has the lasting effect.  It sort of complements an inverted aphormation of the Stress Doc:  Learn to Fail or Fail to Learn!

And I also recalled an earlier discussion with the Director of Education of the Unitarian Universalist Congregation.  There may be interest in my doing a “Resilience & Risk-taking” program for their Youth Group.  What kind of message would speak to both older teens as well as adults?  Finally, the error/mistake line also captured my poetic imagination.  Perhaps “A Mistake Is but an Error” will be a cathartic and imaginative adventure.  Feel free to share.  Enjoy!
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A Mistake Is but an Error:
An Ironic-Poetic Odyssey for Human Authenticity and Audacity
 
A mistake is but an error
Why the reign of holy terror?
Must there always be a loser?
Is it really now or never?
Don’t let hyper-controlling order
Invade a sense of your own border.
Life and death is true urgency…
All else is but priority!

Perfection…Living Perfection
Grows from seeds of rejection
Perfection…Sterile Perfection
The dark side of depression.

An error is but a failure
To this I shout, “Hallelujah!”
Despite hand-wringing and the fury
Of inner voices – judge and jury
The only time you are a twit:
Not learning from and laughing with it.

Perfection…Fine Perfection
Elaborate preparation
Perfection…Exact Perfection
A formula for inaction.

A failure’s but a minor trauma
Despite the tears and family drama.
Reject that “b.s.” – be safe – mantra
Ride the bull in the arena.
To outwit your b.s. box
Wrestle with this paradox:
Do Strive High and Embrace Failure!

Perfection…Rigid perfection
More chronic constipation
Perfection…Timid Perfection
About time for an eruption.

A trauma morphs into disaster
When you just run faster, faster
Making it a fearful master.
Embrace the pain, face your sorrow
Both today and tomorrow.
To realize Buddha mind
Meditate on your behind!

Perfection…Driven Perfection
Oh high and mighty obsession
Perfection…So Pure Perfection
Better get thee to confession.

A disaster’s but a danger
Unless treated as a stranger
While bottling up your anger…
Now who you gonna hit?
Still, I’ve given you an answer
To fight this alarmist cancer:
Be a wise man and a wise guy
An Athena flying sky high.
Resist that square peg-round hole fit –
Learn to surrender…never quit!

Perfection…Blind Perfection
Denies failure’s potentiation
Risk-Averse Perfection
Blocks the bridge to aspiration.

Epilogue-Epitaph

Poke gentle fun at your own flaws
A tried and truly noble cause
For muting know it all’s and boors
With some punch & polish, well placed grit.

Write about and roam the earth
Spread seeds of hope, songs of mirth
Your loving, lasting epitaph:
A wily-warm, wise-wicked wit!

Perfection…Flawless Perfection
An ideal of conception
The “Illusion of Perfection”
Saved by human imperfection!


Mark Gorkin, MSW, LICSW, "The Stress Doc" ™, a Licensed Clinical Social Worker, is a national keynote speaker and "Motivational Humorist" known for interactive, inspiring and FUN programs for government agencies & major corporations.  A Critical Incident Consultant for the National EAP/Wellness Co., Business Health Services, the Doc also leads “Stress, Team Building and Humor” programs for the military.  A former Stress and Violence Prevention Consultant for the US Postal Service, Mark is the author of Practice Safe Stress, The Four Faces of Anger, and Resiliency Rap.  For more info on the Doc's "Practice Safe Stress" programs or to receive his free e-newsletter, email stressdoc@aol.com or call 301-875-2567.

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

The New “R & R” – Courageous RESILIENCE & Creative RISK-Taking: The Art of Designing Disorder

Here's a speaking-workshop program decades in the making, though two recent catalysts – a church program and a social work conference – helped put the final pieces and touches together.  I believe it captures my inner Teddy Roosevelt.  Hope you think it’s as special as I do.  Enjoy!
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The New “R and R” – Courageous RESILIENCE and Creative RISK-Taking: The Art of Designing Disorder
 
Immediately after a recent “Stress Resilience and Passion Power” Program for the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Columbia, MD two attendees approached me – one was the UU Director of Learning, the other a scientist and parent.  Both expressed the belief that my interactive, thought-provoking, and humorous method, and especially my material on “Stress Resilience,” “Learn to Fail or Fail to Learn,” and the “Steps of Creative Risk-Taking” would be great for high school students.  Howard County Schools tend to put considerable emphasis (and workload) on high level achievement; not surprisingly, student and parent stress levels can be plenty elevated.  Both plan to talk with the Youth Director of the Congregation to see if we can pilot a student program that might be able to spread its wings and fly in county schools.
 
Then, the next day at a Social Work Conference, keynoter Brene Brown walked her “Daring Greatly” talk.  She focused on having the courage to be vulnerable; in fact, for her, true courage does not exist without feeling vulnerable.  The topic (and her book of the same title) was inspired by the oft-cited quote by President Teddy Roosevelt:
 
It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly; who errs and comes short again and again; because there is not effort without error and shortcomings; but who does actually strive to do the deed; who knows the great enthusiasm, the great devotion, who spends himself in a worthy cause, who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement and who at the worst, if he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly. So that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat.
 
Barriers to and Transfusions for Blood and Guts
 
Too often people mistake vulnerability for weakness.  This is not surprising when the familiar synonyms are:  susceptible, weak or weak position, defenseless, helpless, exposed; also open to, in danger, at risk, etc.  Who wants to be vulnerable!!!  That’s the paradox:  it takes courage to be vulnerable.  In fact, there’s a big difference between being overwhelmed by fear, helplessness, or risk and staying and working with gnawing, even hyperventilating anxiety.  One fork, frequently echoing voices of shame and blame, leads to panic or paralysis; the other path somehow has your mind-body sweating yet grappling with these same disruptive and dread-full emotions.  (And sometimes the courageous act is recognizing when biochemistry not moral character is the driving dynamic.)  In the face of such vulnerability, pluck remains resilient and passionate by getting back in the saddle and continuing to problem-solve, especially in the face of setbacks. Courage may require admitting the need for support – from the biochemical to the interpersonal (e.g. daring to do a medication trial or joining a therapy group).  When regularly set into motion (that is, harnessing the “motion” in emotion), the acceptance of vulnerability paired with passionate-courageous action aids the “off the wall” (wonder-art-love-learning) search for meaning, integrity, and community, for future plans and hope.
 
Vulnerability has always been a critical part of my “Creative Risk-Taking Model.”  Actually, near obsession about vulnerability (and a longstanding diagnosis of agitated-depression) stands on  two key pillars:
 
1) my anxiety-generating family background (including a father secretly receiving fifteen years of shock therapy for “manic-depression” and a beloved grandmother who lost both her legs, one due to a botched surgery as a young adult, the other to diabetes while living with us; gram died when I was twelve) and
 
2) a chronic childhood-early mid-teen condition of near panic-paralyzing-terrifying fears that inhibited standing up to bullying peers living in the same apartment building; this ongoing psychosocial stress also disrupted my ability to concentrate and perform successfully at school.
 
Not surprisingly, vulnerability is an integral part of my conception of mind, heart, and soul.  As a young adult, a number of critical emotional-transitional scenarios fostered a rebirth of courage:
a) the invaluable help and leadership of my father; while leaving the family temporarily he also stopped the ECT treatments and began psychotherapy; my parents eventually reconciled and dad continued in group therapy for a dozen years; for a few years, our household was like an intense family therapy laboratory,
 
b) undergoing (for me) novel demands and challenges in Army Basic Training,
 
c) soon thereafter, starting Social Work graduate school and then personal and group therapy, where I began to uncover primitive demons and primordial pain,
 
d) dad and I, truly for the first time, having honest and tearful, loving and forgiving conversations, e.g., six years after the disruptive family crisis, my finally having the courage to ask dad why he needed shock therapy, and
 
e) leaving New York City for further post-graduate work in New Orleans; actually, in “The Big Easy,” I eventually came out of the creative closet, in some ways liberated by burning out  while questing for the holy doctorate.  (I call those daze:  When academic flashdancing whirled to a burnout tango!)
 
Through such trials and errors and occasional terrors I learned to face if not embrace the ghosts of humiliation and to harness and ride the primal horse of vulnerable angst.  Step by step I was transforming and driving depression, fear and near panic states along with repressed rage and unfocused aggression into determination and daring.  Over the years, I’ve likely taken on some demanding if not daunting assignments, including breaking into radio and TV with no previous electronic media experience, being a Stress and Violence Prevention Consultant for the US Postal Service, and leading Stress Resilience-Humor-Team Building Retreats with the military.  A definite driver was trying to overcome (without forgetting or numbing) the past shame of too often being a defenseless and co-dependent victim.  My co-pilot was that higher power triangle:  forging pain-purpose-passion into a new identity and direction.
 
The Art of Vital Vulnerability
 
Recently, a “Resiliency Rap” ™ captured what I’ve learned about the vulnerable-valiant process.  Let’s call it channeling that “Rough Rider,” my Inner TR.  First, though, two pithy poetic pieces to help set the arena:
 
Fight when you can
Take flight when you must
Flow like a dream
In the Phoenix we trust!
 
Some of you may recognize the above from my formal newsletter masthead.  And
 
For the Phoenix to rise from the ashes
One must know the pain
To transform the fire to burning desire!
 
Cowardice or Choice:  From Vice to Voice
 
A coward dies a thousand deaths; a hero dies but once **
No matter the total breaths; when it mattered…did you give your every ounce?
The saddest part of cowardice, the sacrifice of peaceful sleep
To cold night sweats of moral vice; a haunted voice that makes you weep.
Still…that twilight coliseum, a dreamscape of battling foes
A second chance for wrestling demons; will you now go blow for blow?
 
You may not win each contest; there will be trails of blood
But you may slowly lay to rest that nightmare-stalking brood.
Each hour brings another choice – to take a stand or run
Even lacking true clear voice, in no way are you dumb.
Dig deep for that rich ore of shame; you are near with fear or rage
Let a guide reveal a novel game; get off the “b.s.” (be safe) stage.
 
Lurking in shadows psychic, bubbling lava primal pain…
Sculpt and dance until there’s magic; Pygmalion’s art shall rise again.
No longer that once robot child, head twisting madly side-to-side
Yes, pursue the “Call of the Wild”; beware that, “Well, I tried.”
“Learn to Fail or Fail to Learn”; please forsake the craft of cool
Fiery spirit will once more burn when com/passion and purpose rule!
 
 
[** Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar]
 
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Courageous RESILIENCE and Creative RISK-Taking: The Art of Designing Disorder
 
A.    From Agenda to the Arena
1) Feel and Focus on “Constructive Discontent”
2) Prepare for Courageous and Creative Engagement
3) Go from “Cowardice to Choice”:  Honor and Harness Angst
 
B.    Aware-ily Jump In Over Head
1) Generates Vulnerable State and Rapid Learning Curve:  Threat-Loss-Challenge
2) Quick Assessment of Skills and Resources:  SERVE
3) Beware of Alligators
 
C.    Strive to Survive High Dive
1) Strive High and Embrace Failure
2) Time Frame:  Beachheads and Battles
3) Come Up for Air; TLC and Collaboration
 
D.    Thrive On “Thrustration”…Incubate to Illuminate
1) Torn between Direct Action and Frustration
2) Take an Incubation Vacation:  Letting Go to Letting Come
3) Creative Tension Spurs Meditative Volcano:  CHOP and Cognitive Disinhibition
 
E.    Design for Error & Evaluation, Being Out and Opportunity
1) Range of Possibilities over Fixed or Ideal Goals
2) Choosing Confusion over Illusion of Control; Avoid “b.s.”
3) Ambiguity for Connection and Vision; Out of the Closet and Develop Networks
 
F.  Discovering Your "Passion Power" and Creating a "Winning Team"
1) The Power of Conflict and Contradiction Exercise
2) Stress Doc's Inspiring "Four 'P's of Passion Power" Matrix
3) Confronting Your Intimate FOE Exercise:  Individual Creativity and Interactive Community.

Mark Gorkin, MSW, LICSW, "The Stress Doc" ™, a Licensed Clinical Social Worker, is a national keynote and webinar speaker and "Motivational Humorist and Team Communication Catalyst" known for his interactive, inspiring and FUN programs for both government agencies and major corporations.  A training and Critical Incident/Grief Intervention Consultant for the National EAP/Wellness Company, Business Health Services in Baltimore, MD, the Doc also leads “Stress, Team Building and Humor” programs for various branches of the Armed Services.  Mark, a former Stress and Violence Prevention Consultant for the US Postal Service, is the author of Resiliency Rap, Practice Safe Stress, and of The Four Faces of Anger.  See his award-winning, USA Today Online "HotSite"www.stressdoc.com – called a "workplace resource" by National Public Radio (NPR).  For more info on the Doc's "Practice Safe Stress" programs or to receive his free e-newsletter, email stressdoc@aol.com or call 301-875-2567.

 

Monday, December 30, 2013

Creative Risk-Taking: The Art of Designing Disorder

As the year comes to a close, it’s often a time of reckoning:  what is the gap between the ideal and the real?  Have I too often clung to “b.s.” (“be safe”) security over risk-taking uncertainty; am I willing to dig deep for genuine growth opportunity?  My first offering for the New Year, the revised first two-steps/two-pages of “Creative Risk-taking:  The Art of Designing Disorder” from the upcoming book, The Stress Doc’s ™ Resiliency Rap.  (If interested, email for the entire poetic essay.)
 
The second (soon forthcoming) communique outlines three classroom/Stress Doc workshop programs derived from The Stress Doc’s ™ Resiliency Rap.  These programs are:
 
1) “Stress, Loss and Change Resiliency”
2) “Creative Expression/Emotional Adaptation”
3) “Core Curriculum Standards Model
 
If you know any teachers, professors, or administrators in a high school or college/university setting that might be interested in knowing more about the Stress Doc resources (including a video on “Overcoming Procrastination,” please consider sharing the email.
 
As I like to say, “Take up the dare; to good adventures for the New Year.”  Peace!

Mark
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Creative Risk-Taking
 
And the final “R” for “Burnout Recovery”
Learn to develop a “Risk-Taking” strategy.
Here are four steps for surviving and thriving
When you’re engaged in on the edge living
Forever smoldering is not forgiving.
Grasping liquid ideas at an uncharted border –
Creative Risk-Taking:  The Art of Designing Disorder:
 
Step 1.  Aware-ily Jump in Over Your Head
 
High anxiety comes with the territory
When landing with awkward uncertainty.
While there may be some initial dread
Take a few breaths…quiet that voice in your head
Focus on rapid learning, instead.
Try saying a prayer or trusting your gut
The opposite of risk – being stuck in a rut.
 
Characteristics of Productive Risk-Takers
 
While you may truly want to confess
Actually, it is time to assess:
How do expectations square with reality?
Ready to handle learning curve vulnerability?
Can you convert anxiety to laser beam energy?
As for skills and resources:  do you have all the horses
For jumping through hoops, for running obstacle courses?
Still admitting gaps without playing “Taps?”
(Hey, focused risk-taking is not shooting craps.)
Finally, can you maintain basic composure
In the face of your “Intimate FOE” –
That long dark shadow…Fear of Exposure?
 
Step 2.  Strive to Survive the High Dive
 
Now that you have bravely jumped in
Avoid making it “lose versus win.”
You are a learner, no way a loser…
Please consider this uncommon mantra:
Strive for the high and embrace failure.
“Rigid consistency,” as Emerson did find –
"Is the likely hobgoblin of a little mind.”

Remember, inside each humbling error
Often stirs a pregnant adventure.
With open eyes and a trusted mentor
One even defies the lonely crowd censure.
But, as matter of fact, the most meaningful crack:
No more running from that “all-knowing” mirror.
 
Either Learn to Fail or Fail to Learn
 
Rethink what it means to fail
Were you chasing the Holy Grail?
Failure no longer is a scarlet “F”
Forever leaving you seeming bereft
A tattoo of shame one can never erase…
Imagine failure as a transitional space
For recognizing what you could not see
For leaning on others so you might be
For giving old voices the third degree
For fighting convention and assumption
For discovering steely determination
To close the breach, seemingly out of reach
Between current position and true aspiration.
 
Placing Failure in Time Perspective
 
Of course, it’s not just a matter of rhyme
Embracing failure will take some time.
Consider these two slogans of war
For sorting the chaff, for probing the core:
1) Founding a beachhead, no matter where you stand
Is not the same as securing the island.
2) Many battles are fought and lost
Before a major victory is won.
So do not run…but do reckon the cost.
 
The Stress Doc’s TLC
 
As you swim and tread to who knows where
Please don’t forget to come up for air
Taking time out for mentor or peer
With whom you will play “Truth or Dare” –
One having the courage to fill your ear with
Tender Loving Criticism & Tough Loving Care!

[For the entire poetic essay, email stressdoc@aol.com]

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Defying Cultural Patterns and Predictions Engaging Stress and Crisis: 3 “R”s for Discovering Responsible, Resilient & Risk-Taking Essence

When you get a thank you card at the end of a program signed by participants during the event either it’s a less than captivating workshop or the group was really motivated to give you feedback. Fortunately, it was the latter and the words inscribed were very positive and poignant – people felt “enlightened,” “inspired” and “the word stress will mean (some) thing different after your seminar.” Sponsored by Federal Asian Pacific American Council (FAPAC), the “Brown Bag” program was, “The Challenge of Natural and Man-Made Disasters: Growing through Crisis and Building Bridges & Networks.” While the turnout was small (ten folks) and richly diverse (a variety of Asian nationalities and two African-Americans, more men than women, most over forty or fifty years of age, and many in management/leadership positions at different federal and DC agencies), we had a truly open and insightful, lively and heartfelt exchange. The focus was less about the tragedy in Japan and more about the challenge closer to home – working for the Federal or DC Govt. (whose funding is tied to the feds), especially in the time of budget cuts and freezes and looming program contraction. (I suspect the small turnout reflected how many government employees are feeling anxious or “out of control” about their uncertain environment; meetings are being called suddenly; people are bunkering down.)

I believe the group was somewhat surprised by the level of intimate sharing, as this is not standard procedure at their meetings. In fact, before the program, one of the program coordinators reminded me that this is a group that culturally does not typically open up about their emotions; FAPAC members tend to be analytical and either hold their feelings tight to the vest (especially in a work setting) or get straight to the point. They are not into the “soft” stuff, regardless of sex. At one point the group laughed at my acknowledging that in FAPAC there are not only Rambos; probably as many Rambettes.

Defying Cultural Expectations: Four Key Steps

However, I have spoken at FAPAC and ASPIRE (Asian professionals at the IRS) conferences before and have always been able to generate stimulating interaction, considerable laughter and meaningful sharing among groups of fifty or more.

So what helped us once again defy the so-called “cultural” tendency regarding openness, and in only fifty minutes? I believe the key was a four step process:
1) Acknowledging cultural coping patterns
2) Pondering why Stress Doc programs with primarily Asian audiences have been so well received
3) Exploring the Chinese iconographic concept of “crisis” – “danger and opportunity”
4) Using a risk-taking questionnaire for self-evaluation, small group consultation and large group discussion along with supportive and informative feedback.

Let’s separately examine these “Four Mind- and Heart-Opening, 3 “R” – Responsible, Resilient & Risk-Taking – Tools of Engagement”:

1. Acknowledging Cultural Coping Patterns. When it comes to dealing with stress and crisis, all cultural groups have both strengths and vulnerabilities. However, I told the group I wanted to focus on a “Western” coping pattern; actually an iconic symbol of the vanishing “Old West” – the cowboy or the traditional “Marlboro Man” – affixed on his horse, all alone, staring out on an expansive horizon. I then quickly shifted to the obvious: in a time of unprecedented interactivity and interconnectivity we cannot afford to be the isolated Lone Ranger or Rangerette. Also, I reminded the group: “Strong silent types get a lot more ulcers than they do Oscars!”

And, of course, this is doubly true in a crisis. Research shows that in times of high uncertainty, stress and “No Exit” challenges, a key to resiliency is connecting and sharing with like-situated others, that is, people who not only can walk in our shoes but also feel our bunions! Misery doesn’t just like company. In fact, research shows it especially likes miserable company. In tough times, almost nothing beats or better helps rejuvenate than sharing an understanding laugh. Finally, when habitual ways of coping are insufficient to the personal-professional-familial challenge at hand, it’s critical to engage with friends, colleagues and/or advisors who can provide new problem-solving ideas and resources, and also help you realize you don’t have to struggle alone.

2. Elaborating Past Program Success. I posited that my programs have been well-received by Asian-Pacific American audiences because we gradually create a safe atmosphere for risking sharing emotions and imperfections, being able to laugh at one’s own (and others’) flaws and foibles, while giving people permission to be a bit “out-rage-ous.” Various conference program exercises, in particular a 3-“D” Team Exercise – Discussion, Drawing & Diversity – enables participants to playfully and pointedly yet respectfully question as well as poke fun at dis-organizational authority and bureaucratic absurdity. And in several post-3-D feedback segments, attendees have emphasized the perfectionist or critical family voice still being carried around. The younger Asian-Pacific American professionals more eagerly jump in to the interactive exercise; the more senior participants seem to experience a greater sense of relief and gratitude for the opportunity to open briefly their personal-cultural “Pandora’s Box.”

3. Exploring the Double-Edged, Chinese Concept of “Crisis.” Back in the 1980s, teaching “Crisis Intervention,” I would share with Tulane University Social Work graduate students how the Chinese wisely depict “crisis” with two iconographic symbols – “danger” and “opportunity.” Back to the present, the FAPAC group brainstormed some of the perceived dangers of crisis – from profound uncertainty and anxiety to loss of control and feeling overwhelmed. In response to a participant’s observation, I quoted psychiatrist Jerome Frank’s definition of “hopelessness”: an inability to imagine a tolerable future. While not quite as easy to identify, we eventually captured the “half full” component of crisis: You are compelled to think outside your box. Breaking away from habitual coping patterns and exploring new problem solving strategies generates unexpected options, resources and alliances. And, with help, if you can fight through the initial crisis-induced fog, confusion, depression, panic or paralysis then the crisis state – by definition a time-limited challenge – will fairly quickly, usually within one day to six weeks, fuel heightened determination and focus, along with an unforeseen capacity for dealing with risk.

And crisis also fuels another driving force: As I asked the group, "What's the first thought that comes to mind when you hear the word 'Passion'?" Here's a hint: it's the "s"-word, but neither the three letter (sex) or four letter (silk or soap opera) variety. Actually, if you have a good dictionary the "s'-word for passion is suffering, as in the Passion Play – the sufferings of Jesus, or more generically, the sufferings of a martyr. I recall a workshop participant's mind-opening response to the word "passion": Rosa Parks. Perfect! Crisis, Passion & Risk (talk about some stimulating CPR) can compel one who is truly prepared to take a stand (for Ms. Parks, fittingly enough, by remaining seated), to courageously assert integrity no matter the hostility of the environment.

The Yin-Yang Potential of Painful Memory

There’s another dynamic that captures both sides of the crisis spectrum: the intensity of a crisis state generates cracks in your psychic-emotional defenses. Painful memories and feelings begin to seep or sometimes flood into consciousness. Not only are you dealing with a scary outer world, but your turbulent inner psyche is adding to the boiling and buzzing confusion. The oft asked question: “Am I going crazy?” Likely not; you are experiencing a natural crisis byproduct. And there are two potential benefits:

a) facing and embracing these resurrected emotions helps you grieve and reexamine the pain from the past; you no longer need to employ as much energy keeping these charged, frightening or upsetting emotions at bay. The tears of grief help cleanse old wounds. As I once penned: Whether the loss is a key person, a desired position or a powerful illusion, each deserves the respect of a mourning. The pit in the stomach, the clenched fists and quivering jaw, the anguished sobs prove catalytic in time. In mystical fashion, like Spring upon Winter, the seeds of dissolution bear fruitful renewal, and

b) in kindred fashion, acclaimed 20th c. British author, John Fowles noted, emotional memories are his “electric current.” He needs to be plugged into this power source for creative juices to maximally flow. So potentially, in crisis not only are you thinking out of box but you’ve also courageously opened your Pandora’s Box. Many forget that the last so-called demon to escape from the mythological box was in fact “hope.” So in the spirit of Yin-Yang holism, embracing potent memories unleashed by crisis frees up latent energy, hope and creativity…pretty powerful crisis opportunities and legacies.

4. Using a Risk-Taking Questionnaire for Self-Evaluation and Group Consultation. The FAPAC group was ready to put our ideas and insights to work. The evaluation-collaboration-feedback tool was the risk-taking quiz below. First, the participants were divided into small groups of three or four. (Starting small helps foster participation and openness.) After answering the questions individually, each person selected two questions reflecting areas of risk-taking strength (strong “Yes”) and two areas of vulnerability (strong “No”). Participants then shared their results, engaging in give-and-take problem solving with “strong Yes” group members helping strengthen a colleague’s identified areas of vulnerability. In closing, as each team reported back to the larger group, one critical thread emerged: not being paralyzed by failure or the fear thereof, that is, accepting, even encouraging, failure, as a vital learning component of an effective crisis management and creative risk-taking process. Despite the recognition that each person in the room was a success story, many acknowledged the underlying shame triggered by project failure or simply a dread of that lurking “Intimate FOE: Fear of Exposure.”

Two failure-busing strategies were proposed:
a) try to redefine failure as less personal judgment and more transitional space between aspiration and current position; a transformational key is recognizing that old critical ghosts still walk the dark halls of your psyche and realizing that these outdated critical-cultural voices need not overrule your own expectations, time frames and standards for success; the understanding gained from trial and error helps close the gap; remember the mantra for turning FOE into friend: when it comes to failure, we are learners not losers!
b) and a second mantra: Strive high and embrace failure: set goals high, give it your best, and accept that you will often fall somewhat short; failure is simply a natural part of your modus operandi; again, falling short and lessons long remembered are the perennial stepping stones for rising and reaching anew.

The Risk-Taking Self-Assessment Quiz

[adapted from Stacy Hunt and Mark Gorkin, “Risky Business: Learn to Climb Outside Your Comfort Zone,” Legal Assistant Today, June 2006]

To evaluate how much of a social-cognitive and performance-problem solving risk taker you are, answer the following questions. Be honest with yourself! There are no right or wrong answers. Try to answer “Yes” or “No”; for some questions you may decide both answers apply, depending on the situation or context. If so, consider assigning a percentage, e.g., 70% Y and 30% N. This quiz provides the opportunity to explore your personal feelings and beliefs and gain some insight into areas of strength and vulnerability when in or out of a social, emotional and learning comfort zone.

1. Do you associate failure more with learning opportunity instead of with feelings of shame, guilt, inadequacy or being a “loser?”

2. Do you tend to consider things from different (even conflicting) sides and see shades of gray rather than as all or none, black or white?

3. Can you usually work effectively on a problem and reach closure despite feeling anxious or knowing your end-product may be less than perfect?
4. In general, are you relatively comfortable with uncertainty or ambiguity?

5. Can you question or disagree with authority or convention, privately as well as in a public setting?

6. When you are wrong, can you publicly acknowledge an error or mistake, even laugh at your flaws and foibles, instead of attempting to cover them up?

7. Under time or performance pressure do you tend to become more productively focused rather than scattered, inert or impulsive?
8. Are you a self-motivator rather than needing to be motivated by other people, structured goals/rewards, etc?

9. During times of meaningful change, do you feel positively excited and curious rather than feeling anxiously out of control?

10. In general, do you like to explore new paths or procedures instead of following well-practiced or trusted paths or procedures?

11. Are you able to often see or redefine a problem as an opportunity; do you tend to make lemonade from lemons?

12. When it comes to problem-solving do you tend to balance analysis and logic with emotion and intuition?

13. Can you make decisions in a timely manner (or without excessive delay) even when being wrong or making a mistake is a possibility?

If you answered, “yes” to a majority of the above questions, you tend to feel comfortable with uncertainty, performance anxiety, change, i.e., taking risk. If you answered “no,” to half or more of the questions, or have two or three big “NO”s, it is likely time to start developing risk-taking characteristics and time for exploring a larger world.

Closing

A four step process has been outlined for turning a “lunch & learn” into a culturally diverse laboratory for cultivating self-responsibility, resiliency and risk-taking (the 3 “R”s; also the title of my new leadership program) during times of stress and crisis. Even with a self-described “analytical, close to the vest” cultural group, in rather short order, a climate can be nurtured that encourages open and intimate sharing, emotional reflection and supportive group engagement. The four keys:
1) Acknowledging cultural coping patterns
2) Pondering why Stress Doc programs with primarily Asian audiences have been so well received
3) Exploring the Chinese iconographic concept of “crisis” – “danger and opportunity”
4) Using a risk-taking questionnaire for self-evaluation, small group consultation and large group discussion along with supportive and informative feedback. Surely here are ideas and steps to help one and all develop those 3 “R”s and to…Practice Safe Stress!

Mark Gorkin, MSW, LICSW, "The Stress Doc" ™, a Licensed Clinical Social Worker, is an acclaimed keynote and kickoff speaker as well as "Motivational Humorist & Team Communication Catalyst" known for his interactive, inspiring and FUN programs for both government agencies and major corporations. In addition, the "Doc" is a team building and organizational development consultant. He is providing "Stress and Communication, as well as Managing Change, Leadership and Team Building" programs for the 1st Cavalry Division and 13th Expeditionary Support Command, Ft. Hood, Texas and for Army Community Services and Family Advocacy Programs at Ft. Meade, MD and Ft. Belvoir, VA as well as Andrews Air Force Base/Behavioral Medicine Services. Mark has also had a rotation as Military & Family Life Consultant (MFLC) at Ft. Campbell, KY. A former Stress and Violence Prevention Consultant for the US Postal Service, The Stress Doc is the author of Practice Safe Stress and of The Four Faces of Anger. See his award-winning, USA Today Online "HotSite" -- www.stressdoc.com -- called a "workplace resource" by National Public Radio (NPR). For more info on the Doc's "Practice Safe Stress" programs or to receive his free e-newsletter, email stressdoc@aol.com or call 301-875-2567.