practical insights, transformative knowledge

Daniel Goleman Social Intelligence talk from Authors@Google

July 22, 2010 by Mike · Leave a Comment 

Daniel Goleman discusses his book “Social Intelligence: The New Science of Human Relationships” as a part of the Authors@Google series. Enjoy the video.


Artist Lucky Vita’s Dharma Inspiration

July 13, 2010 by Mike · Leave a Comment 

Lucky Vita is an audio/visual alchemist from San Francisco, California. Music and film are his lifelong creative passions, and they are deeply affected by his spirituality. He works primarily in collaboration with other musical performers, making music videos and recordings of live performances. Lucky is one of the 14 artists featured on Dhamma Gita: Music of Young Practitioners Inspired by The Dhamma.

Lucky recently spoke with More Than Sound about how his practice inspires and influences his creative projects.

 
 Lucky Vita Interview [14:17m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

One-sided Coin

May 7, 2010 by max · Leave a Comment 

So our new album of young Buddhists’ music – Dhamma Gita – is out and totally rocking. Sharon Salzberg just tweeted about us, and we were linked on the blog of PBS series The Buddha where Hanuman wrote a nice piece…. anyway….

There’s one track on Dhamma Gita – Faith by Michaela Lucas (featuring Sogyal Rinpoche teaching) – where Rinpoche is talking about all the delusional perceptions of Samsara (the cycle of death and rebirth) – which, if you think about it means like everything we see and experience here while alive. Everything? Delusion? Holy crap.

So driving into work this morning listening to this part of Faith I recalled a version of this, from what I think was the Zen teachings of Bodhidharma, somewhere in the vast stacks of the internet: “You can’t find the Buddha with the mind, there’s no use looking – the mind only finds more mind.” You simply can’t find what is real with what is delusion. How could you? It’s impossible!

All at once it occurred to me, finally, what that Borges story El Disco (The Disk, not The Disco) meant. Read it 10 years ago perhaps. All of a sudden – Sogyal, Bodhidharma, El Disco! Delusion!

PS – found that page and while my direct quote may have been more or less apocryphal, there was this attributed to Bodhidharma: ‘A Buddha doesn’t observe precepts. A Buddha doesn’t do good or evil. A Buddha isn’t energetic or lazy. A Buddha is someone who does nothing, someone who can’t even focus his mind on a Buddha. A Buddha isn’t a Buddha. Don’t think about Buddhas. If you don’t see what I’m talking about, you’ll never know your own mind.’

Let’s all hang in there. Happy Friday!

Emotional Intelligence & Emergency Response – Part 4

December 16, 2009 by lyon · Leave a Comment 

We are pleased to offer this talk by Dan Goleman called Emotional Intelligence and Emergency Response. Whether you are a manager leading a team through a time of crisis, or a first responder handling a dangerous emergency, Goleman’s guidance provides a framework which may be used to prepare for such an event. In this section, Goleman leads a discussion with Barry Dorn of the Harvard School of Public Health and Leonard Marcus of the Harvard National Preparedness Leadership Initiative.

Section 4 – Risk, Uncertainty and Experience

In the last decade, the public health profession has often been called on to prepare for unprecedented emergency events. As public health officials face off against global pandemics and the threat of chemical/biological weapons, the unpredictable nature of the emergency becomes a grave concern. And to compound this problem, the brain responds to uncertainty in the same way as it responds to a known danger.

In these new and ever-changing times, what’s the best way for an emergency worker to prepare for the unprecedented event?

 
 Emotional Intelligence & Emergency Response - Part 4 [11:39m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Emotional Intelligence & Emergency Response – Part 3

November 4, 2009 by lyon · Leave a Comment 

We are pleased to offer this talk by Dan Goleman called Emotional Intelligence and Emergency Response. Whether you are a manager leading a team through a time of crisis, or a first responder handling a dangerous emergency, Goleman’s guidance provides a framework which may be used to prepare for such an event. Following his lecture, Goleman leads a discussion with Barry Dorn of the Harvard School of Public Health and Leonard Marcus of the Harvard National Preparedness Leadership Initiative.

Section 3: Getting and Staying “In The Zone”

In this section, Goleman discusses new neurological evidence that suggests that humans are more receptive to emotional signals than was previously believed. Therefore, it is very important for leaders to set an emotional tone that will serve each phase of the crisis management. Whatever the emotional tone is at the top, that tends to ripple down through the levels of command. What you as a leader have done (or not done) to establish chemistry within the group, will determine the functionality of the group when there are high stakes.

 
 Emotional Intelliegence & Emergency Response - Podcast 3 [11:07m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Emotional Intelligence & Emergency Response – Part 2

October 22, 2009 by lyon · Leave a Comment 

We are pleased to offer this talk by Dan Goleman called Emotional Intelligence and Emergency Response. Whether you are a manager leading a team through a time of crisis, or a first responder handling a dangerous emergency, Goleman’s guidance provides a framework which may be used to prepare for such an event. Following his lecture, Goleman leads a discussion with Barry Dorn of the Harvard School of Public Health and Leonard Marcus of the Harvard National Preparedness Leadership Initiative.

Section 2 – Four Key Skill Domains For Leadership
In this section Dan Goleman discusses four important areas of expertise that are essential to effective leadership:

1) Emotional Self-Awareness - Recognizing your own inner state is the first step to being able to draw on past successes and failures. Maintaining access to this decision matrix allows for informed, clear-headed decisions in the heat of the crisis.

2) Emotional Self-Management - Because this decision-matrix is non-verbal, staying cool in the moment (and avoiding the “amygdala-hijack” that we heard about in the last section) allows a leader to trust his gut sense of how to handle the challenging situation.

3) Empathy – How adept you are at seeing things from various perspectives can determine your own effectiveness as a leader during emergency situations as well as during the team-building (prework) phase.

4) Leadership style – Of the five styles that Goleman mentions here (Visionary, Coaching, Affiliative, Consensus, and Command & Control), there is no one single style that will serve you well in all situations. Knowing how to utilize them in different situations is the key to tapping into the potential of every person and improving your team’s Group IQ.

 
 Standard Podcast [12:14m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Emotional Intelligence & Emergency Response – Part 1

October 17, 2009 by lyon · Leave a Comment 

Now that the podcast is up and running again, we are pleased to offer a talk by Dan Goleman called Emotional Intelligence and Emergency Response. Whether you are a manager leading a team through a time of crisis, or a first responder handling a dangerous emergency, Goleman’s guidance provides a framework which may be used to prepare for such an event. Following his lecture, Goleman leads a discussion with Barry Dorn of the Harvard School of Public Health and Leonard Marcus of the Harvard National Preparedness Leadership Initiative.

Section 1: Applied Emotion

In this first section, Goleman describes why effective emergency response requires “the intelligent application of emotion.” He offers a neurological explanation for why cognitive intelligence is often rendered irrelevant in our response to highly stressful situations. During these events, the brain’s decision-making center shifts from the left prefrontal cortex (which usually governs logically and analytically) to the amygdala, the brain’s emergency response center. Since they are rooted in deep-seeded biological survival tactics, reactions typically generated by the amygdala are strong, sudden and emotional, and they often lead to poor decisions. In order to be effective in emergency situations, responders must learn to resist the “amygdala hijack” and remain calm and focused enough to draw on necessary expertise to devise an innovative solution.

 
 Standard Podcast [11:36m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Dan Goleman with Larry Brilliant – part 3

April 2, 2008 by hanuman · Leave a Comment 

“Olympic-level athletes of the heart.”

In the final segment of their discussion, Goleman introduces “empathic concern” and what social neuroloscience has taught us about different individuals’ capacity for compassion. Brilliant expands on these cutting-edge studies with examples from his life that have lead him to observe a distinction between “smart” and “wise” individuals. Finally, Brilliant closes by sharing inspirations from his past that have instilled in him a working model of “Compassionate Capitalism,” and how the tools of the business world can be used to serve the sick and poor.

 
 Dan Goleman and Larry Brilliant Podcast Part 3 [16:50m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

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