Well-Being Week Daily Schedule
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.
This year, we have general registration. When you register for Well-Being Week in Law, you’ll have access to the online event platform where all webinars will be available.