The Lawyer's Guide to Balancing Life and Work: Taking the Stress Out of SuccessLaw Practice Management Section, American Bar Association, 1999 - 235 pages Designed to help lawyers achieve personal and professional satisfaction in their careers, this guide offers seasoned wisdom for navigating a stress-free path through a career in law. Through practical and explorative exercises, lawyers learn how to identify habitual patterns, clearly evaluate past and current jobs, and discover self-empowerment, and how to apply this information to making healthy decisions. The exercises take personal facts from all aspects of a lawyer's complex life and arrange the information into simple, useful advice for making productive career choices. The book is peppered with informative and engaging anecdotes, and firsthand burnout experiences-offering remedies and direction for lawyers whose careers and lives are out of balance. |
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Page 78
... demands made on us by those jobs . Even though the subject may be painful to explore , we are already living with that kind of pain . It is said that the longest journey is the journey inward . When we choose to take that journey , we ...
... demands made on us by those jobs . Even though the subject may be painful to explore , we are already living with that kind of pain . It is said that the longest journey is the journey inward . When we choose to take that journey , we ...
Page 83
... demands the " Pursuit of Production . " In that pursuit , we appear to chase after work until we have secured enough to meet whatever the system requires , even when those requirements leave us harried and overloaded . In law firms ...
... demands the " Pursuit of Production . " In that pursuit , we appear to chase after work until we have secured enough to meet whatever the system requires , even when those requirements leave us harried and overloaded . In law firms ...
Page 101
... demands of work may overwhelm how we would like to behave , the way we act is still our behavior . Our responses , for the most part , are predictable . We respond to the demands in front of us because they are loud and urgent and let ...
... demands of work may overwhelm how we would like to behave , the way we act is still our behavior . Our responses , for the most part , are predictable . We respond to the demands in front of us because they are loud and urgent and let ...
Table des matières
SECTION | 4 |
Prologue | 5 |
Taking StockThe Path to the Law | 11 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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