Well-Being Week Daily Schedule
Welcome to the Daily Schedule for Well-Being Week in Law
Welcome to Well-Being Week in Law (WWIL) 2024! 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.
2024 Theme
This year’s WWIL theme—Well-Being Reboot: A Fresh Start for Positive Change—embodies two key ideas:
- 1. A clean slate to restart our well-being action plans (that may have been part of our waning New Year’s resolutions) and
- 2. Behavior change to enhance well-being.
For a full explanation of the theme, jump to About WWIL.
In alignment with this theme, WWIL programming will focus on actively trying new things and behavioral psychology tools to support sustainable change. For example, the Daily Schedule recommends Well-Being Mini Experiments to try out each day that may spark insight and inspiration to make long-term, positive change.
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 6, 2024
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.
Stack Up Your Steps
Get physically active for 25 minutes today through small bouts of activity all day. Keep it going for the rest of the week … and beyond.
Our goal is to do 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. You can count bouts of physical activity of any length (e.g., walking briskly from the parking lot). Also try to work in two days of muscle-strengthening activity. (See U.S. DHHS’s 2018 Physical Activity Guidelines).
Be creative and stay positive about moving (“Yay- more chances for steps!”):
- Walk (briskly) whenever possible—e.g., to work, for coffee, to lunch, to talk to colleagues, etc.
- When you drive, park far away.
- Replace sit-down meetings with walking meetings.
- While watching TV, walk on a treadmill, ride a stationary bike, or do strength exercises.
- Don’t carry everything at once—e.g., take multiple trips to bring in grocery bags.
- Walk your dog one more time.
- Use a timer to remind yourself to get up and move at least 3-4 minutes every hour.
Try Something New – or Renewed
Engage in a physical activity for at least 30 minutes that’s new to you or that you’ve dropped but want to start again.
Ideally, pick something you enjoy, that’s challenging and helps you grow, and builds connection with others. Research says these elements will give you the biggest bang for your buck for the physical-mental well-being connection.
Ideas: Pilates, yoga, pickleball, all forms of dancing, outdoor biking, indoor cycling class, Tai Chi, basketball, Zumba, hiking, daily walk, boxing training, strength training, tennis, jogging club, aerial silks, Barre class.
Sleep Tight
Use the DREAM acronym to improve your sleep quantity and quality. Sleep really is a well-being superpower.
D is for Darkness. Darkness is essential, as light disrupts melatonin production, the hormone that signals sleepiness. Blackout curtains or a sleep mask can significantly improve sleep.
R is for Routine and E is for Establishing a Schedule. Consistency is also key. Go to bed and wake up at the same time each day, even on weekends, to regulate your body’s natural sleep-wake cycle. Also think about incorporating a pre-sleep routine into your day.
A is for Avoiding Screens. Electronic devices emit blue light, which suppresses melatonin. Power down phones, laptops, and TVs at least an hour before bed.
M is for Moving & Eating to Maximize Sleep. Regular physical activity promotes better sleep, but avoid strenuous workouts close to bedtime as they can be stimulating. Avoid heavy meals, caffeine, and alcohol before bed, as they can disrupt sleep patterns.
By incorporating these evidence-based practices, you can create a sleep routine that promotes restful nights and re-energized days
Live Webinar
TBD
Moving Together: Experiments in Movement, Exercise, & Dance
We are kicking off Well-Being Week in Law 2024 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 the following sessions:
- Session 1: Yoga
- Session 2: Beginning Ballet for Well-Being, Anna Wassman-Cox, Movement Point.
- Session 3: Sitting Boxing Workout, George Zakhary, Sit Grit Fitness.
- Session 4: High-Intensity Interval Training (HIIT) Workout, Sergio Cardoso from Canyon Ranch Resorts.
- Session 5: Workstation Design for Well-Being, Krys Hines, MBA, PT, DPT, KH Ergo & Wellness.
- Session 6: Peloton
We will apply for CLE credits, which will be dependent on individual states MCLE requirements.
More information and registration link coming soon.
TUESDAY: May 7, 2024
Align
SPIRITUAL WELL-BEING
Cultivating a sense of meaning and purpose in work and life. Aligning our work and lives with our values, goals, and interests.
Bursts of Benevolence
Do five new things that positively impact or improve the welfare of work colleagues or clients. Choose things outside your normal work routine, and do them all in one day. Research says you’ll get a boost in your work’s meaningfulness.
Try it out today (or some other day this month) and consider adding it to your monthly calendar. Writing down your helpful activities and reflecting on them can help too.
For some ideas, check out the Acts of Kindness Activity Guide.
This activity is based on Prof. Blake Allan’s research, Helping others increases meaningful work.
Find The Spark: Create Meaning in Everyday Work
Cheers to all you lawyers and legal professionals who wake up each day feeling inspired by your purpose-driven work. For the many who don’t quite feel that way, there’s much you can do to create more daily meaningfulness.
Meaningfulness often emerges from personal growth; feeling that our contributions matter; service to others; and feeling like a valued part of something bigger than ourselves.
So, to create more meaningfulness, you can, for example, connect with clients to hear how your work supports them professionally and personally. Help your colleagues. Think about how your smaller piece of work fits into the larger whole. Find ways to express your skills, strengths, and values more fully through your work.
- To spur your thinking about creating more meaningfulness, ask yourself these three questions and then take action:
- How does this work impact another human being?
- What is made possible by my work? 3. How can I use one of my strengths more to do this task?
It takes some attention and effort but all the little bits add up to a more meaningful work experience–which, in turn, can boost your well-being and engagement.
For more information and ideas, see Dr. Anne Brafford’s article Judge’s Well-Being and the Importance of Meaningful Work (which applies to everyone, not only judges).
Tap Into The Power of Awe
Do something today to inspire awe. Awe can enhance our experience of meaning in life and well-being by reminding us of our interconnectedness, the eternal splendor in our world, and larger purposes. Here’s a short article on awe, titled Why You Need to Protect Your Sense of Wonder.
Idea #1: Take a photo of something awe-inspiring and post it on LinkedIn, using #WWIL2024. Check out this short article for advice. Post your photos on the Community Photo Wall on the WWIL website.
Idea #2: Build a music playlist that inspires a sense of awe. For inspiration, here’s a link to a podcast called How Music Evokes Awe.
Idea #3: Go stargazing tonight. You don’t need fancy equipment to embrace the wonder of the night sky. If you’d like advice to get started, check out this beginner’s guide and head outside.
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 nonwork activities, attend WWIL’s Share Your Passion program on Friday, May 10. 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 nonwork time.
Ideas: Read a (nonwork) 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 (nonwork) things that make you happy. Write a handwritten card or letter to someone.
Live Webinar
Wednesday, May 8, 1:00-2:30 p.m. ET (60 min webinar workshop with opportunity for Q&A)
Well-Being Lab: Turning Knowing into Doing with Playful Experimentation
Presenters: 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 [Coming Soon]
- 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.
Materials Coming Soon
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.
THURSDAY: May 9, 2024
Connect
Social Well-Being
Building connection, belonging, and a reliable support network. Contributing to our groups and communities.
Don’t Be a Jerk at Work
Even when you’re busy and stressed, do your best to avoid being sarcastic, disrespectful, curt, snide, rude, or unfair to your colleagues. Don’t yell or unfairly blame or criticize them. Pay special attention to your emails and texts.
TIPS: For today, try:
- No sarcasm, condescension, or curtness. Try curiosity, kindness, and patience.
- Replace “why” questions with “what” questions, which sound less personally challenging.
- Pay special attention to emails, where incivility is rampant. Ask yourself: Did I include an opening greeting? Is it too brief? What tone am I projecting? Would talking be a better option? (See Slow Down and Write Better Emails.)
Our accidental lapses of civility—even instances that we may perceive as minor—can accumulate and cause big injuries to our colleagues’ sense of belonging that trigger depressive symptoms and burnout. In fact, research shows that incivility and interpersonal conflict have a bigger negative effect on others’ sense of belonging than social support’s positive effect. So, even if you can’t be cheerful, try not to be mean.
For advice on curbing incivility, see The price of incivility by Christine Porath and Christine Pearson.
For advice on engaging in high-quality, micro-bits of connection, see Four ways to create high-quality connections at work by Jane Dutton and Monica Worline.
Boost Belonging at Work
Today, pick a way to make a meaningful contribution to benefit your work group or organization—or support a colleague in doing so. An often-neglected ingredient of workplace belonging is positive contribution. Belonging emerges, not only from caring relationships, but also from experiences of giving or contributing to others. When we can contribute our unique strengths, skills, ideas, and perspectives to benefit our groups in meaningful ways, we feel more like integrated, valued group members. The result is greater belonging, inclusion, engagement, and well-being.
If you’d like to read more about how contribution ties to inclusion, see Prof. Quinetta Roberson’s recent article on the concept of “contributive justice.”
Send a Quick Gratitude Note
Use IWIL’s free e-message tool to send a note of appreciation to a colleague, client, friend, or family member. Feeling and expressing gratitude is an easy, science-based way to help protect and promote our physical and psychological health (e.g., higher mental well-being and self-esteem and fewer depressive symptoms) and strengthen our relationships at work and at home.
For more information and ideas about gratitude, see this brief article How Gratitude Makes You Happier.
FRIDAY: May 10, 2024
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.
Focus On What You’re Doing
One of the simplest prescriptions for greater happiness is this: Think about what you’re doing. We’re happiest (and less depressed) when we’re mentally present while engaging in the world. The particular way we spend our day (e.g., partying vs. a quiet night at home) matters much less than whether our thoughts match our actions.
The simplicity of this advice doesn’t make it easy. The human mind likes to wander: Almost half of our thoughts each day aren’t related to what we’re doing. And “a wandering mind is an unhappy mind” (Castro, Scientific America, 2010).
Working to improve control of our attention (especially when we’re stressed, when our wandering thoughts tend to turn negative) can aid our mental health.
Aim for more daily experiences of feeling fully absorbed in what you’re doing. We have only a limited amount of attention and can invest it in ways that either enrich our lives or make us unwell.
For more information, see this Scientific America article summarizing the mind wandering research and an academic journal article about its association with depression
Mental Health Self Check-In
Do a mental health check-in with yourself. 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.
- More self-assessments and resources are available in IWIL’s Mental Health Resources Guide.
Change Your Scenery
Explore new things and add variety to your daily routine, which can positively impact mood, well-being, and creative thinking. For example, try small changes of scenery, like a new coffee shop or lunch-time restaurant, taking your laptop outside for an hour, or working in a fresh location for a day.
Here’s a short article titled A Change of Scenery Can Boost Your Well-being and Mood.
Live Webinar
Friday, May 10, 30–60-minute sessions, 11:00 am ET-2 pm ET
Share Your Well-Being-Boosting Passion
How legal professionals invest their non-work time and energy can have a big impact on their mental health and work engagement. But many feel so busy and tired from work, that their non-work activities dwindle. It can become a vicious cycle. We want to help. The aim of this program is to provide inspiration and resources to try out new, well-being-boosting activities outside work. Session leaders will:
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- Share activities they do to disconnect from work, revitalize their energy, stave off burnout, and feed their soul.
- Explain how they fit their passion into their busy lives and give suggestions to others for doing so.
- Provide tips and resources.
Well-Being-Boosting Passion Sessions:
[Times are currently tentative.]
Topic | Time | Speakers |
MUSIC | 11:00 am ET | Kendra Brodin, Jessica Moore, Denise Robinson |
WRITING | 12:00 pm ET | Kelli Dunaway |
COOKING | 12:00 pm ET | Drew Collins |
TRAVEL | 1:00 pm ET | Luis Pineda (moderator), Matt Potempa, Chahira Solh |
KNITTING | 1:00 pm ET | Cheryl Solomon, Jessie Spressart |
ART JOURNALING | 2:00 pm ET | Kori Carew |
PHOTO WALKS | 2:00 pm ET | Noah Bradow |
More Information & Registration Links Coming Soon.