Well-Being Week Daily Schedule
WEDNESDAY: May 8, 2024
Engage & Grow
Career & Intellectual Well-Being
Seeking personal satisfaction, continuous learning and growth in our professional and personal lives, and financial stability. Engaging in creative or intellectually challenging activities that foster ongoing development and monitoring cognitive wellness.
Stretch Yourself
Positive challenge and continual growth are strong sources of mental well-being, while stagnation and underutilization of skills and strengths are related to depressive symptoms. To experiment with this source of well-being, pick an area for personal growth (at work or home) and make a specific action plan for the next 3 months.
To get ideas for growing through non-work activities, attend WWIL’s Share Your Passion program on Friday, May 9. Sessions will be led by people connected to the legal community who will share activities they do to disconnect from work, revitalize their energy, and feed their soul. Register on the event website.
Build Breaks Into Your Work Day
Take several breaks throughout your work day to help you maintain focus, brain health, and mental well-being. Our brains start to repair themselves during breaks as short as 10 minutes.
There aren’t one-size-fits all rules about breaks, so find what works for you. Use an hourly timer as a reminder to check in with your mind and body about whether it’s time for a break. Or add daily breaks as calendar entries. Encourage and support colleagues in doing the same and avoid break-shaming.
Here’s a short article called Breaks for Breakthroughs for further guidance.
Turn Off The TV; Turn Up Your Personal Growth
For just today, curb or eliminate TV-watching–the leisure activity that occupies the most time for the average American (about 3 hours per day). In that time slot, do something you enjoy (alone or with others) that helps you grow intellectually, interpersonally, or creatively. Such mini experiments might give us the insight and inspiration needed to begin to make new, healthier choices about how to invest our non-work time.
Ideas: Read a (non-work) book or magazine. Read to your kids. Paint, draw, sculpt, cook, or bake. Film a fun family video. Go for a photography awe walk. Plant something. Play a musical instrument. Go to a local lecture. Research a new culture. Plan a road trip or vacation. Make a list of 100 (non-work) things that make you happy. Write a handwritten card or letter to someone.
Live Webinar
Wednesday, May 7, 1:00-2:30 p.m. ET
Well-Being Lab: Turning Knowing into Doing with Playful Experimentation
Presenters: WWIL Co-Chairs, Dr. Anne M. Brafford, JD, MAPP, PhD, and Tara Owens Antonipillai, JD, MAPP
Feeling frustrated that your New Year’s well-being resolutions fizzled out by May? Ditch the guilt and disappointment and join the Well-Being Lab: Your fresh start to make sustainable change for greater health and happiness.
Science tells us which well-being strategies benefit people “on average.” That’s helpful. But it doesn’t guarantee that they’ll work for you. Or that they’ll work forever. Also, most of us know many things we should do to protect and promote our well-being. But busy lives and ingrained habits get in the way.
Because everyone is different, there’s no one-size-fits all well-being strategy. This means that we each need to figure out what works for us and how to sustainably integrate it into our own complicated, changing lives. How do we do this? Self-experiments can help. The gist of self-experimentation is to try different things, figure out what’s working for you, and then keep doing things that work. And the more fun we have doing it, the more likely that we’ll keep experimenting and integrating our learning into our lives.
In this session, we will focus on four objectives:
- Developing well-being self-experiments with a curious, playful mindset.
- How to continually assess and modify your self-experiments.
- Behavioral psychology techniques to transform good intentions into lasting change.
- Learning from each other’s experiences.
Your Experiment Starts Now: Choose & Try Out an Experiment Before May 8:
- Download the session materials now: DOWNLOAD HERE
- Design and carry out your own well-being self-experiment, and
- Come to the May 8th session prepared to share your experiences with others. (We’d love for everyone to come prepared to share, but all are welcome–whether or not you complete an experiment or care to share. )
For more inspiration, see 50 Ideas for Five Day Self-Experiments by Alice Boyes Ph.D.
We will apply for CLE credits, which will be dependent on individual states MCLE requirements.
DOWNLOAD SESSION MATERIALS HERE
PASSCODE to access the session recording: %2DSc.@6
Live Webinar
Wednesday, May 8, 3:00-4:00 p.m. ET
Thriving Through Turbulence: Strategies for Maintaining Well-Being
Presenters: Tamara Fox, Dr. Fritz Galette, and David B. Sarnoff
Hosted by PLI
Thank you to the Practicing Law Institute (PLI) for its sponsorship of Well-Being Week in Law 2024!
Join us for an empowering presentation on maintaining well-being during challenging times. Explore actionable techniques to nurture your mental, emotional, and physical health amidst adversity. Learn how to cultivate resilience, foster positive habits, and thrive despite life’s obstacles. Gain insights and tools to navigate difficulties with grace and emerge stronger than ever.
Free and open to all.