Well-Being Week Daily Schedule
Welcome to the Daily Schedule for Well-Being Week in Law
Welcome to Well-Being Week in Law (WWIL) 2025! WWIL is organized annually by the
Institute for Well-Being in Law (IWIL) during Mental Health Awareness Month. Its aim is to
raise awareness about mental health and encourage action and innovation across the profession
all year-round to improve well-being.
This Daily Schedule—the hub of WWIL—recommends activities and webinars for each day of
the week. Each day focuses on a distinct dimension of holistic well-being for legal professionals:
- Monday: Stay Strong (Physical Well-Being)
- Tuesday: Align (Spiritual Well-Being)
- Wednesday: Engage & Grow (Career & Intellectual Well-Being)
- Thursday: Connect (Social Well-Being)
- Friday: Feel Well (Emotional Well-Being)
For the full definition of each well-being dimension, jump to About WWIL.
2025 Theme
This year’s WWIL theme is The Social Rx: Boosting Well-Being with Connection. We’re spotlighting social connections because they:
- Are chief sources of psychological well-being.
- Are amplifiers and catalysts of all well-being dimensions.
- Support positive change.
For a full explanation of the theme, jump to About WWIL.
Register, Participate, & Win Prizes
Everyone loves free prizes, and it’s easy to enter to win during WWIL. All you need to do is
register—whether you’re an individual or a representative of an organization. To learn more about the prizes and registration, jump to Register for WWIL.
MONDAY: May 5, 2025
Stay Strong
PHYSICAL WELL-BEING
Striving for regular activity, good diet and nutrition, enough sleep, and recovery. Limiting addictive substances and seeking help for physical health when needed.
Get Active With Others
Team up with others to support a daily goal of at least 30-minutes of physical activity. You can get started today by joining the free Well-Being Week in Law Move Together virtual activities, scheduled for 1-3 pm ET.
All kinds of physical activity boost mood and vitality. When we do it regularly, it can prevent and improve symptoms of depression and anxiety and can boost memory, attention, learning, and cognitive processing.
Strive for at least 150 minutes of moderate to vigorous activity per week—ideally, aim for 300 minutes. This translates to 22 to 42 minutes per day. (See U.S. DHHS’s 2018 Physical Activity Guidelines).
Recruiting others to join you makes it more likely that you’ll achieve your activity goal. (See U.S. DHHS’s 2015 ‘Step It Up’ Call to Action). Also, when we become absorbed in synchronized movement with others, our brains release chemicals that boost feelings of connection and belonging and reduce pain.
Keep the Fun Happy Hours; Ditch the Hangover
Having fun with colleagues after work is a great idea. It can reduce stress while promoting social bonding, a sense of belonging, work engagement, and well-being.
Often, though, after-work fun includes booze. And, whether we realize it or not, workplace drinking norms can have a big effect on how much we drink. Among lawyers, colleagues’ drinking habits are a big predictor of one’s own risky drinking.
Because even modest amounts of alcohol can negatively impact mental and physical health, many are choosing to drink less or not at all. In 2025, nearly half (49%) of American adults plan to drink less, and about 25% already don’t drink at all.
Get started today planning fun after-work events that don’t center on alcohol or make people feel awkward for not drinking. Here are a few tips:
- Brainstorm with colleagues about group activities that focus more on “happy” (social bonding, fun, stress-reduction) and less on alcohol.
- Try out an alcohol-free May.
- Don’t ask others why they’re not drinking alcohol or pressure them to drink.
- Curb the “polite” habit of offering or bringing drinks to others who didn’t request them.
4-Week Sleep Squad Challenge
Recruit a Sleep Squad of colleagues to participate with you in a 4-week challenge to collectively improve the quality and quantity of your sleep.
Many in the legal community are chronically sleep deprived—which can harm mental and physical health. To encourage improvement, we’ve created the 4-Week Sleep Challenge activity sheet to help your group track and reward your progress.
Sleep Squad Challenge Instructions:
- Recruit your Sleep Squad and distribute the activity sheet.
- Each day, mark off whether you engaged in a listed sleep-boosting behavior.
- Each week, gather your group and focus on a different aspect of sleep hygiene. Share your bedtime routine tips and tricks with others.
- Assign points for engaging in each sleep-boosting behavior. Reward group members who check off all actions for at least five nights. Perhaps give successful participants a prize or enter them into a prize drawing.
- Post on a virtual board or group chat about how your health and mood feel when you’re successful with the daily challenge.
Live Webinar
Monday, May 5, 12:00-1:00 pm ET
WWIL 2025 Kickoff: Boosting Well-Being With Connection
Speakers:
Dr. Anne M. Brafford, JD, MAPP, PhD
Tara Antonipillai, JD, MAPP
Dr. Anne Brafford and Tara Antonipillai, the Well-Being Week in Law Co-Chairs, will kick off WWIL 2025
with an engaging session that explains this year’s theme and leads activities to bring it to life. More information
coming soon!
Live Webinar
Monday, May 5, 1:00-4:00 pm ET
Moving Together
Get your WWIL 2025 started with a fun opportunity to learn and experience the benefits of moving with other
people. Moving together has positive effects on the body and mind.
First, all kinds of physical activity boost mood and vitality. When we do it regularly, it can prevent and improve
symptoms of depression and anxiety and can improve memory, attention, learning, and cognitive processing. On
the other hand, people who sit most of the day are at a higher risk for depression and a host of physical health
problems.
Also, when we become absorbed in synchronized movement with others (especially when in-person), our brains
release chemicals that boost feelings of connection and belonging and reduce pain.
This program will offer multiple sessions with expert leaders for different types of movement. You can join any
session in which you’re interested. Feel free to turn your camera off. Absolutely no experience necessary.
You can choose from multiple sessions. The schedule is coming soon.
TUESDAY: May 6, 2025
Align
SPIRITUAL WELL-BEING
Cultivating a sense of meaning and purpose inside and outside work. Aligning our work and nonwork lives with our values, goals, and interests.
Seize The Day With Gratitude and Service
Live today in gratitude and service. Be fully present to others, look for ways to benefit them, listen deeply, and say 100 thank yous before the day ends.
Most Americans (70%) say that they’re religious and/or spiritual. Many look to work as an opportunity to fulfill spiritual needs and enact spiritual values.
Scholars describe workplace spirituality as encompassing efforts to fulfill spiritual needs, experience meaningful work, and cultivate community. Research shows that spirituality at work functions like a psychological resource that promotes well-being, resilience, vitality, and connectedness to coworkers and workplaces.
People describe their own spirituality at work as encompassing a variety of behaviors, such as respect, openness, kindness, performing meaningful work, and being in harmony with their values. In this 8-minute video, fellow legal professionals share how they integrate spirituality into their work lives.
To cultivate spiritual well-being today, look for ways to be grateful and of service to others:
- Give wherever you go—including your time, attention, appreciation, advice, talents, and patience.
- Before every meeting, say to yourself: May my words and actions be for the benefit of those who are here.
- Silently wish everyone you encounter happiness, joy, and laughter.
- Say 100 “thank yous” today. Thank others for their contributions and mindfully note all for which you’re grateful (e.g., my family, partner, health, home, job, food).
Revitalize Your Day With Contemplative Practices
Pick a new contemplative practice to experiment with today or focus on deepening a practice you’ve already adopted.
Spiritual practices play an important role in supporting not only spiritual well-being but also emotional, social, and psychological well-being. Contemplative practices are a type of spiritual practice used across religious and spiritual traditions.
Many everyday activities can be considered contemplative practices when they’re done with intent to:
- Cultivate a personal capacity for deep concentration, presence, and awareness, and
- Develop a stronger connection to one’s inner wisdom and/or God/Spirit/the Divine.
For ideas to try, download the free Contemplative Practices Guide. Examples include:
- Loving-kindness (meta) meditation
- Gatha practice
- Yoga
- Qi gong
- Deep listening
- Prayer
- Sitting meditation
- Spending time in nature
- Religious rituals
Encourage (and Personally Live) Team Values That Bolster Spiritual Well-Being
In addition to personally living spiritual values, coordinate work team activities designed to integrate human-centered values that bolster spiritual well-being.
How we prioritize and live our values can boost or undercut spiritual well-being. For example, an orientation toward intrinsic values and goals—such as personal growth, relationship quality, contributing to the community and the greater good, and self-acceptance—bolsters well-being. In work groups, shared intrinsic values predicts engagement, collaboration, and teamwork.
On the other hand, extrinsic values/materialism—focused on wealth, possessions, image, and status—harm team functioning and individual well-being:
- A power-prestige attitude toward money (viewing money as the ultimate symbol of success) negatively predicts spiritual well-being—strongly so.
- Materialism harms mental well-being and predicts loneliness, selfish behavior, and low-quality relationships and a tendency toward racial and ethnic prejudice.
- Tunnel vision on profits—that neglects other important values and priorities—predicts unethical behaviors and cheating, negative job attitudes, reduced work effort and collaboration, burnout, and an absence of engagement and experienced meaningfulness at work. Among law firm lawyers, it’s related to depressive symptoms and work-life conflict.
What this all suggests is that fostering shared intrinsic values within work teams can bolster spiritual well-being, other forms of well-being, and team motivation and functioning.
Resources to guide team values activities are available from Indeed’s website—including How to Create Team Values and 12 Values Exercises for Teams. Individuals interested in prioritizing intrinsic values can refer to the Aligning With Your Values Activity Guide.
Live Webinar
Tuesday, May 6, 12:00 pm -1:00pm ET
Fireside Chat: Practicing in Recovery
Speakers:
James D. Lawrence, Partner, BCLP
Casey L. Miller, Associate, Dechert
Steven R. Wall, Global Managing Partner, Morgan Lewis
Join us for an insightful and candid conversation with a distinguished panel of legal professionals who have
successfully navigated their careers while embracing the journey of recovery. Our panelists will share their
personal stories, challenges, and triumphs.
In addition to discussing the resilience and self-awareness that recovery fosters, the panelists will offer practical advice for those currently practicing law in recovery. We will also explore insights from recent IWIL research on long-term recovery in the legal profession, shedding light on key factors that support sustained well-being.
As part of the discussion, panelists will reflect on this year’s Well-Being Week in Law theme of
connection—examining how social support, community, and professional networks play a critical role in
recovery and long-term success in the legal field.
Through this open dialogue, attendees will gain a deeper understanding of the impact of recovery on career
progression, strategies for cultivating a supportive work environment, and evidence-based guidance on
maintaining well-being while practicing law.
We will apply for CLE credits, which will be dependent on individual states MCLE requirements.
WEDNESDAY: May 7, 2025
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.
Put Down Your Smartphone, Uplift Your Career Well-Being
For a one-week trial period, aim to reduce your daily smartphone use by 60 minutes. Evaluate whether your experiment enhances your work experience and mental health.
- Last year, Americans spent an average of over 5 hours per day on their smartphones, and most (53%) want to cut down in 2025.
- Problematic smart phone use is related to symptoms of poor mental health and negatively predicts life satisfaction, sense of control, and empathy. Excessive phone time also can be a barrier to meaningful connections and activities that support well-being.
- A recent study found that participants who cut down their daily smartphone use by just 60 minutes experienced greater work satisfaction, work motivation, work-life balance, and positive mental health.
- The best way to sustain a reduction in phone time is to replace it with positive experiences. For example, in the study, participants who had the best results compensated for their reduced phone time by increasing their physical activity by 30 minutes.
- So, consider combining Monday’s “Get Active With Others” activity with today’s “Put Down Your Smartphone” recommendation. At the end of the week-long experiment, evaluate how you feel and whether you want to sustain these activities.
Celebrate Colleagues’ Strengths
Today, get started on a new habit of strengths-spotting at work.
- Strengths-spotting—observing and celebrating others’ strengths—can make people feel valued and affirm that their unique contributions are noticed, invited, and appreciated.
- Chances are good that many of your work colleagues are, in some ways, blind to their strengths. By spotting and expressing appreciation for their strengths, you may help them both feel recognized and spot their own strengths.
- Hundreds of studies have found that, when people consciously use characters strengths more and in new ways at work, they have more positive work experiences—including engagement, well-being, job satisfaction, and the experience of meaningfulness.
- To get started on a new strength-spotting habit, download the Strengths-Spotting Worksheet. Also included are worksheets to identify your own strengths and use them more and in new ways at work. Consider sharing the worksheets with colleagues and working toward strengths-spotting as a new team norm.
Engage in Team Vacation Planning to Bolster Well-Being
Plan vacations and take them—and encourage and enable others to do so.
A study of 6,000 American lawyers led by Prof. Larry Krieger inquired what factors related to lawyers’ subjective well-being. Can you guess the strongest predictor of well-being of all activities measured? It was number of vacation days taken. Do you know what it beat out? Income level. Always trading work for vacation is not a great well-being strategy.
Other research (inside and outside the legal profession) shows that people need an opportunity to disconnect and regenerate. An inability to do so creates an increased risk for burnout, depressive symptoms, fatigue, energy loss, and cardiovascular disease. By contrast, people who feel recovered report better functioning and well-being.
So, take some time to plan to unplug. Team leaders should consider organizing group vacation planning:
- Get the group together with calendars ready.
- Ask everyone to come to the meeting prepared with their desired vacation dates.
- Discuss dates and resolve any conflicts with client work.
- Make plans to enable each team member to unplug while on vacation.
Additional guidance can be found in 5 Steps to Making Vacation Less Stressful for Employees and How to Manage Your Team’s Vacation Request.
Live Webinar
Wednesday, May 7, 12:30-1:30 pm ET
The Social Cure: Boosting Well-Being With Connection
(60 min webinar workshop with opportunity for Q&A)
This will be an activity-based session that builds on our theme—boosting well-being with connection. More details coming soon!
THURSDAY: May 8, 2025
Connect
Social Well-Being
Building connection, belonging, and a reliable support network. Contributing to our groups and communities.
Share a Meal with Someone Today
Connect with people over food today. It can be as simple as coffee with a colleague or as celebratory as a fun team dinner.
- Today’s “social prescription” builds on the U.S. Surgeon General’s Recipes for Connection campaign, which highlights the power of connecting at mealtime in combating loneliness. It also draws on a global survey by Gallup finding that people who regularly eat meals with others are happier.
- Can one meal solve loneliness? No. But it can be a meaningful first step toward deepening relationships, building belonging, and strengthening well-being—both individually and across the profession.
- Resources to help you plan a meaningful gathering are available under the “Recipes for Connection Resources” tab on the WWIL website.
Send a Quick Gratitude Note to Tell Others They Matter
Take a few moments today to show others that they matter, are valued, and belong.
We suggest sending 3 notes of appreciation to colleagues, clients, friends, or family members. To make it easy, you can use IWIL’s free e-message tool:
- A loneliness epidemic has hit American workplaces. Chronic loneliness is related to poor mental health and workplace functioning and is a clear barrier to team thriving.
- Attention has focused on employees being alone at home as a main cause of rising loneliness. But workplace loneliness is not about being alone but about feeling unseen, unheard, and insignificant.
- Feeling a sense of belonging and that one matters is the opposite of feeling lonely. It flows from feeling accepted, included, respected, and contributing to our work and workplaces.
- Feeling and expressing gratitude to others also can benefit you. It can help protect and promote your own physical and psychological health and strengthen your relationships at work and at home.
- For more information and ideas about gratitude, see this brief article How Gratitude Makes You Happier. For ideas about everyday acts of kindness to help people feel they matter, see the Acts of Kindness Guide.
Connect With Others Across Difference: Seek Discomfort for Personal Growth
When confronted with perspectives that conflict with your own, don’t bail out: Recognize that your feelings of discomfort are a sign of personal growth.
- The quality of our relationships suffers when we avoid people with whom we think we disagree, close our minds to different perspectives, or bail out of conversations at the first sign of conflict.
- A new study (summarized by Greater Good Magazine) has identified a mental habit that can improve our resilience: Reframing our discomfort as a sign of growth.
- In the study, all participants engaged in stressful activities—such as journaling about difficult topics or reading challenging information about COVID or gun violence from a news source they wouldn’t usually read.
- Some participants were told that their goal was to feel uncomfortable, awkward, nervous, anxious, or even upset. They were asked to push past their comfort zone and know that feeling uncomfortable is a sign that the activity is working.
- The study found that, across activities, participants asked to positively reframe discomfort felt more engaged and motivated to persist.
- According to a study author: “Growing is often uncomfortable; we found that embracing discomfort can be motivating. People should seek the discomfort inherent in growth as a sign of progress instead of avoiding it.”
- The study suggests that we “might be judging normal human experiences like nervousness, stress, and discomfort too harshly. While our inclination might be to avoid them, they seem to be part of becoming better people and living a rich life.”
FRIDAY: May 9, 2025
Feel Well
Emotional Well-Being
Valuing emotions. Developing an ability to identify and manage emotions for health, to achieve goals, and to inform decisions. Seeking help for mental health when needed.
For “Social Cure” Benefits, Strengthen Your Connection to Meaningful Groups
Take steps today to begin exploring how to strengthen your connection to meaningful groups—inside or outside the workplace.
- According to what’s been called “Social Cure” research, belonging to multiple groups that matter to us bolsters well-being. Benefits include reduced loneliness, less depression, greater life satisfaction, and better indicators of physical health.
- People with many group memberships have higher well-being than those with few—above and beyond the number of interpersonal relationships they have. In short, groups are good for us.
- All kinds of groups can be the source of Social Cure benefits. But the quality of our connections makes a big difference. Benefits come only from groups with which we experience a subjective sense of belonging or a meaningful shared identity.
To help you get started, we’ve created a free activity guide, 5 Steps to Connect with Groups to Boost Well-Being. Consider recruiting a group of colleagues to do the activity together and share information about possible groups to join.
Join a Group Meditation
Join a meditation group to cultivate mental well-being while connecting with others focused on personal growth.
- The Mindfulness in Law Society offers weekly “Mindful Mondays” (3pm ET) and “Wakeful Wednesdays” (5 pm ET), which are virtual group sits.
- Anyone in the legal profession is welcome to attend. No experience is necessary. The format generally consists of about 20 minutes of guided meditation, with 5 minutes of gathering time at the beginning and 5 minutes at the end for questions and comments.
Giving and Receiving Through Community Service
Organize an activity for volunteers or join a community service project that sounds interesting and manageable to you.
Community service or volunteering supports others in need while boosting our own mental and physical health, including reduced anxiety, depression, and loneliness and higher life satisfaction, purpose, and meaning.
Do you feel like you don’t have enough time to volunteer? This is a common obstacle. What you may find, however, is that spending time on other people actually increases your subjective experience of time.
Here are a few ideas:
- Organize a blood drive at your organization.
- Volunteer for a pro bono matter.
- When organizing conferences, ask attendees to bring gently-used business suits to donate to nonprofits for unemployed people.
- At baby showers, invite guests to bring extra baby items to donate to a local homeless shelter.
- At winter holiday parties, ask guests to bring cans of food to donate to the local food bank.
Do a Mental Health Check-In With Yourself & Others
We can’t fully show up for others as we’d like when we’re not mentally well. Today, take some time to do a mental health check-in with yourself. You can start by taking a brief mental health self-assessment. Use a mental health checklist to evaluate any areas of risk for you and make a plan to take action. A few resources are provided below:
- Mental Health America Mental Health Tests
- New York State Bar Association Personal Wellness Assessment
- If you are in crisis or need immediate help, please call the Crisis Life-Line at 988. You can also reach out to your local lawyer assistance program.
Also, educate yourself about signs that colleagues’ mental health is suffering and how to respond appropriately. The Challenging Conversations Guide is one place to start.