Thursday, May 5, 2016

Final Coaching Reflection

Final Coaching Reflection

In this final coaching call with Andrew we talked mostly about his culminating project and how it fits in to his overall work.   While Andrew felt that some of the vocabulary would be lost to him overtime, the ideas would stay.  When I asked Andrew about the workshop he conducted, he explained to me that it went very well.  Though it had it’s limitations, mainly since it was only a 2 hour session, he found ways to navigate through it.  Instead of explaining every little detail to his group, he acquainted them with key elements that they could understand, such as conversation flow.  I thought this was very smart move on Andrew’s part, it ensured that he did not lose his audience.  Surely he couldn’t expect them to understand weeks worth of theory in a short 2 hour workshop.


Moving forward Andrew seemed to have a good perspective on how this theory would fit into his life. From what he told me I could tell that he would carry a sense of enlightened awareness as a result of the class.  However he also expressed to me how the theory could be limiting of one chose to treat it as gospel.  This is an important point.  I explained to Andrew, just like a philosopher, teacher or musician, one must take elements of many styles and integrate them into a style that is their own.  This is how we establish a true sense of self.  

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Final Coachee Reflection


Final Coachee Reflection

The mood in this week’s coaching call with Amy was a bit somber for the fact that we would not be meeting any longer.  We both agreed that the coaching portion of the class, where we got converse and discuss our ideas, was one of the strongest parts of class.  Through coaching calls with Amy over the semester I really got to know her and trust her advice on whatever it may be that I was sharing with her.

I expressed to Amy that one way that I felt that the class has changed me, is in how I have become more aware of my thoughts and from where they originate.  I am not sure that I have become “better” at conversing, but I am certainly much more apt to understand where things went wrong in a scenario where a communication breakdown occurred.  I am better able to follow the path that led to the breakdown and recognize, more often than not, that the problem was due to a lack of understanding at the onset of the relationship or discussion.  

  I also explained to Amy how I was able to synthesis a lot of the information we have learned in class when writing the paper.  First there is accumulating the knowledge, and then there is processing it in your mind.  The final stage is actualizing the information which I believe was done in our culminating paper.  A key point that I was able to derive from writing my paper, is that Sharmer’s theory of fields of dialogue is the same concept as a lot of philosophy that deals with cycles such as seasons.  It is an interesting idea that we must go through stages where our actions are incorrect in order to come to the correct way of being.  Amy commented how this is often called building a foundation and I knew exactly what she meant.   What this class has allowed us to do is not recognize the goal of dialogue, for this we had already known, but understand how we can arrive there.  I know for me this path was unknown and somewhat mystical.  

Sunday, April 3, 2016

Coach Reflection 5

This week Andrew reflected on his experience with empathetic listening.  The subject he chose was his brother, who would be the best man in his upcoming wedding.   Andrew expressed to me that his brother had dropped the ball in planning for the wedding.  He had failed to act as a best man should in matters such as the bachelor party and as a result Andrew had to plan these things himself.  I could tell from our conversation that the lack of effort by his brother to fill his role as best man really hurt Andrew.  

In a conversation this week with his brother, he asked him why he had not planned for these events.  Andrew practiced empathetic listening for his brothers responses.  Although Andrew disagreed with his brother’s reasoning (that he was not sure what to do), he did not interject.  Instead he tried imagining why his brother could possibly feel this way and as a result Andrew had a few “empathetic insights”.  The first that his brother simply didn’t feel the same connection to him that he did for his brother.   Secondly, that his brother was shy and the act of reaching out to Andrew’s close friends who he did not know well was hard for him.


Personally, I think that no matter how empathetically Andrew listened to his brother, the conflict and issue that existed would not be solved.  As an outsider to the situation, I know that if my best man dropped the ball like this, the message I would be getting is exactly the one that Andrew got - “I felt such a strong connection to you which was exemplified in having you be the best man but you do not have the same connection”.  This led us to the a very important realization, that although you can be empathetic to someones perspective, it does not mean you should tolerate or accept their behavior.  In the case of Andrew’s brother, no matter which way you slice it, there is no justification that can fix the conflict that arose from the predicament.   The best one can hope for through empathetic listening in a scenario such as this, is to recognize truths about an individual - who they are and why they act certain ways.  And to some extent recognize that although we may want more from them, or although we may want them to feel/act differently we cannot force someone to be who they are not.   

Thursday, March 31, 2016

Coachee Reflection 5

Coachee Reflection 5

Today I spoke with Amy on two conversations I had this week.  The most valuable one was with my close friend Travis.  We have been best friends for as long as I can remember and although we still remain close today, we do not see each other as often as we once did. Travis is an individual who has made some poor decisions in life and as a result his options (career and living arrangements) are limited.  This mainly has to do with his lack of responsibility and inability to recognize that there are repercussions for his actions that may effect his future.   Without getting too involved with his background, I will say that he has had a somewhat rough upbringing and I imagine this has had an effect on his functionality.  
The last few days I have spent with Travis because his sister is getting Married this weekend in California. We flew out together and I recognized that he would be the perfect person for this week’s assignment.   Once I picked him up for the airport he realized he had forgotten his $300 sunglasses on the plane.  He shrugged and said I’ll just get another pair.  Then he took out his phone to show me the new pair he intended to get, which were also $300.  Keep in mind this is a person who can hardly afford rent and he was about to spend a large some of money to replace the sunglasses he had lost as if he were buying socks.  Normally I would get extremely irritated by this type of behavior from him and immediately try talking sense into him.  However, trying to be an empathetic listener, I asked what it was about the sunglasses he was showing me that made them so desireable and worth the price tag.  Was it their functionality in protecting his eyes from the sun? Or was it a fashion statement where the design looked a way that was appealing? His replied that because of a nose injury from earlier in his life his nose was somewhat misshapen.  Since expensive sunglass companies offer different size measurements for the nosepiece of the glasses, he was able to find the ones that fit him correctly.  I was actually impressed by his answer and could see from putting myself in his shoes that this wasn’t such a ridiculous purchase. 
The next conversation I had was with an old friend who used to be my boss when I worked construction.  He is a great guy who is wonderful to talk with.  When speaking with him I recognized that he is an empathetic listener and that as a result I am too.  He creates this container which makes me feel more inclined to be empathetic in my listening.

After explaining all this to Amy she had a really wonderful question she asked which was when I was being an empathetic listener in the conversation with Travis, did it have the same effect as my conversation with my boss.  After thinking about this insightful question I cam to the conclusion that it had.  Normally I would have attacked Travis on how I believed the glasses were a stupid purchase and to some extent that’s the reaction he expected of me.  However, by being empathetic in my listening we were able to completely dissolve any type of issue or conflict that may have arose, which resulted in a more empathetic conversationalist on his end as well.      

Sunday, March 27, 2016

Coachee Reflection 4

Coachee Reflection 4

     In this week’s meeting with Amy we discussed presencing and the process of identifying the true self.  I briefly explained to Amy what my experience had been like in part one of our weekly assignment.  I went out to the country on one of the beautiful days we had this week and sat for a good deal of time in the woods.   After sitting in silence, began my stream of conscious writing.   In this exercise I explored the different meaning and elements of the word “self”.  It is something that has existed in my for my whole life. I could identify it’s presence when I was a 6 year old kid, collecting rocks in the back yard of my grandparents house.  It was also present in me the first time I got my heart broken.  It follows this body around and has been since the day I was born.  But what is it? This was the hardest question to answer.  Although I recognize it’s existence and acknowledge when it surfaces, it’s not really something to be defined.  This is what art and poetry is for.  I think the most brilliant painters and musicians spend their whole lives searching for a way to express what this is.  

     In my conversation with Amy I explained to her that the area of my life where my true self is most present is when writing songs.  My process for writing is that I sit down for an extended period off time- six maybe ten hours.  I begin to develop ideas of maybe melody of lyrical content.  I act as a detective trying to eek out any clues I possibly can as to where the song should go.  Eventually after devoting time to the song, ideas will begin to come.  The way I see it, one must dedicate a certain amount of time and effort to the song and when they have sacrificed enough, they are given the golden idea from the muse.  This could be a few hours, weeks or even months. When it occurs, it is as if the answer came from a higher source that was not yourself.   What is imperative for this occur is to have complete faith in the process.  To know that if the time is put in that eventually the answer will be revealed.  It is revealed organically from our true self. 


     The future song is written.  A piece of the future song is given as a gift and it is up to the writer to be open to it and recognize it when it arrives.  This takes patience and also a keen sense of awareness.  In the time when I am approaching the answer, I am filled with great energy and elation.  It is an extreme high where all awareness of time disappears.  In these moments I feel most alive and most connected with who I really am.  It’s a very unique experience. One that I very much cherish and respect.   

Thursday, March 24, 2016

Coaching Reflection #4

Coaching Reflection #4

In today’s meeting with Andrew he shared with me the areas in his life where he feels he’s most in touch with his true sense of self.  The first instance he referenced was when he is on stage filling the role of MC in front of children.   once he hits the stage Andrew said there is an extreme focus that occurs where he is zeroing in on his current task and all other thoughts melt away.  In these instances he is not concerning himself with the possibilities of failure.  He is simply acting from his true self, improvising as it goes.  Being one who is often on stage, I agreed with Andrew. I too feel this extreme focus while on stage and a intimate connection with self.

The next example Andrew cited was with woodworking.  One of Andrew’s favorite hobbies is constructing objects from wood.   He explained to me how in his life there is little time when there is complete silence.  However, when he is woodworking sometimes he will be working in silence for hours on end.   This allows him to focus on one thing and nothing else.  In the process he creates an item that is the result of his true sense of self.   

The instance Andrew shared where he feels this true sense of self is through his work.  Andrew explained that one of the reason he really enjoys his work at a school is because it allows him to take many different projects.   When he takes on a new project he has a vision and puts much time and effort into that idea and sees it come to life.  Once the vision comes to life he gets to see children benefit from its application and a collective sense of enjoyment is present.


I explained to Andrew that in the instances he shared with me, he was always injecting a piece of who he was into the task.  He was creating something from his own DNA and then seeing it play out in the world where it is then experienced by the collective.  Once this occurs it is no longer a individuals idea or work, it is a collective thing that was revealed through you.  In all his examples I could relate because I too feel most in touch with myself when I create.  

Friday, March 11, 2016

Coachee Reflection 3

Coachee Reflection 3

For this week’s assignment, I practiced suspension with my music producer. In some ways I feel that suspending my judgment was a drawn out way to come to the same conclusions I would normally of had.  I could see how this might not always be the the case, but it just happened to be this specific time. For the particular song we chose to work on, I knew before hand that I would not like the direction my producer would take. Normally I would have interjected when he began constructing a new direction but recognizing that this assumption was based on past judgements, I allowed him to explore this idea in full. I even made it a point to share with him my process, saying, “in my mind I immediately opposed the suggestions you were about to give but I recognize that was foolish, so lets bring them to life and see what happens.”   The results were just how I imagined. 

In this week’s coaching meeting I explained to Amy my frustration in spending three hours on an idea that I knew from prior experience I would not be satisfied with. I feel in this scenario I suspended the valuable tool of experience and as a result I wasted time and money. I asked Amy where is the line that separates experience and judgment? Amy was very insightful in making me recognize that suspension didn’t mean to always dismiss these notions, but to be AWARE of them.   Once we are aware of where the judgment is derived from, we can consider it’s RATIONALE.   This was a very insightful response that Amy gave and it really helped me put the scenario into perspective.  Amy also added that in a situation where someone is being paid for their service/time, the situation is less suited for suspension.  However, on a personal level, I may have noticed a much different result.  I agreed with Amy.   In personal relationships, suspension can show that we care to understand those close to us and this can make a huge difference in creating an adequate container for future discussion.


The last bit we talked about was the idea of the authentic self.  I explained to Amy how I was having trouble grasping what exactly this was, because it is defined by such vague and abstract ideas.   We then had a discussion about music and where it might play into this.  While I do not think we were able to completely clarify the term, Amy shared a really important point.  She said that being a musician, the idea of an authentic self might not be so foreign as it may be to someone who is an accountant.  The arts celebrate the exploration of our identity and being in touch with our being, while most jobs do not.  This is absolutely true.   I’ve worked many jobs, such as construction and bartending and there was never encouragement in the workplace to reveal my soul.  I was simply encouraged to get my work done.  With music however, our inner self is nurtured and we are encouraged to reach a more spiritual place of being.