Senior Olympics - Why so special to me
I competed in two events at the Senior Olympics held this week in Los Angeles. I previously reported my results. I've been thinking further about the process of the competition and came up with ideas about how the competition relates to my life, and the lives of many people in our profession. Below is how I see the Senior Olympics on the one hand and how they are a metaphor in real life. If you have other events in your life that you care to share, please write me.
I would love to present the following in a graphic format but am technologically challened to do that. So, the presentation is linear. And SO means Senior Olympics and MIRL means Metaphor in Real Life.
Senior Olympics
Rode to the site of the Senior Olympics on the Sunday before the event to make sure I wouldn’t get lost on the day of the first event
Metaphor in real life
Asked my father to drive me to and around both junior and senior high school; my daughter asked me to go with her when she scouted her ultimate college choice
SO
I rode the course before the day of the event to check it out, to determine where the inclines and curves were, to determine the benchmarks before reaching both the 5K and 10K points, and to get an idea of what my time would be on this course, a course I had never ridden before, so that I would know when my last hard push on the course should start.
MIRL
A client of mine asked me to detail what the litigation process was like, what he should expect at each stage of the process and what would be the likely outcome. He needed to reduce the element of surprise and have an idea of the process since he had never been involved with the legal system before.
SO
On the day of the event, I made sure I was early so that I could warm up sufficiently, ride the course more than once and determine if any new obstacles would impact me, as well as appropriately deal with any calls of nature. Because I was early, I had time to talk to a coach who provided me invaluable information about how to approach the race; his advice enabled me to achieve my best time ever.
MIRL
My wife is always early. When she gives me a departure time, I know to advance that by at least 15 minutes. When you know what to expect, you are less likely to be subject to unwanted surprise ... and when you do arrive early, you can network with other people and learn from them.
This experience also confirmed once again the invaluable assistance a good coach provides to lawyers who want to reach their goals, to people who want to more than just show up in life.
SO
Having completed my event, I left. I began to focus on the next goal: recuperating, and then looking at the next event on the following day
MIRL
Having achieved one goal, it’s important to reward yourself, look at your success and move on to your next goal, whether it had already been stated or is created because of your recent accomplishment. This process and working with a coach is a lifetime process ... it does not end just because you achieved your first goal. Life is holistic, a complete life that includes work, play, family, personal achievements and all else that we call living. And a coach can help make important segments that much more effective and rewarding.
SO
I arrived again the following day for the next event. I was a little later than the previous day because I felt more confident that I knew the protocol. But, I was still early. And, I had another conversation with a second coach about this day’s race. He gave me a different “spin” on how to approach the race, in effect telling me that my day’s effort should exceed twice my first day’s result. I thought he was crazy, but listened to his experience. And, though it is still counter-intuitive to me since I didn’t think I could produce two extreme efforts, back to back, on the second day, I went onto the course with two objectives, not one. The first objective was to beat my previous day’s best. The second objective was to ride a time that was less than twice my previous day’s effort. I wasn’t sure I had it in me to achieve the first goal and I thought the second goal was a pipedream ... But, because of the coach and some encouragement from a third person, I achieved both goals!
MIRL
A Coach can help shape our thinking. Positive, constructive support always helps us improve our performance, whether we’re a child receiving advice from a parent or teacher, or a lawyer working with a coach knowledgeable in the process of law practice management. I believe in the coaching process so much that it is not only my profession, but I engage my own coach. And his wisdom and teachings have made a huge and positive impact on my life.
Law IS a Business
Being effective with clients, efficient in the delivery of services to clients and therefore more profitable, we are actually protecting the public by providing sufficient resources to the lawyer to feed his/her family and therefore have no need to invade the trust account funds.
To say that law is a business, a service business, is not to deny that it is also a profession rooted in the highest ideals from the very beginning of our country. Just today, at an American Bar Association meeting, I heard once again the assertion that law is NOT a business, but rather a profession. When one views the economics of the legal community with this assertion in mind, one is drawn to the conclusion that law as a profession must be impoverished. To be a profession means that we are economically poor.
Statistics show that the average income for lawyers throughout the country is low. About 25% earn $50,000 or less and more than 50% earn less than $100,000. These are hardly numbers to brag about, especially considering the many years of education (and thus lost income) required and the high student debt (upwards of $80,000) most graduates carry with them for years after being sworn in.
Then, consider the vast unmet needs of the American people. Who can serve these needs? Certainly not someone who, themselves, is barely making enough money to put food on the table. If it were not for the many lawyers in very large law firms (who make a lot of money = are very profitable) who devote thousands of pro bono hours, the needs of the unserved would be even greater!
The discussion is interesting ... for the very few. The vast majority of lawyers get it! They understand that they are members of an honorable profession and that they must act in a business-like way. Without such a focus, the bankruptcy courts and/or the criminal courts would be far busier dealing with lawyers who invade trust accounts and steal money from their clients.
"A rose by any other name is still a rose." One can deny that law practice is a business; that doesn't make it so.
