Deep Life Reflections: Friday Five
Issue 10 - Making Strides
Hello and welcome to my weekly email newsletter, Deep Life Reflections: Friday Five.
Each Friday, I share five things Iām enjoying, thinking about, and find interesting, which you might also find useful.
This is my tenth issue and a special thanks for all the positive comments and feedback so far. Thanks for being part of the journey! Itās a journey open to anyone, at any time, so if you have a friend, family member, or colleague who you think would also enjoy Deep Life Reflections, simply copy, paste and send them this subscription link:
https://www.deeplifejourney.com/subscribe
Now, on to this weekās Friday Five.
1. What Iām Reading
Finding Ultra by Rich Roll.
A very personal memoir chronicling Rich Rollās transformation from an overweight, middle-aged lawyer to a world-class endurance athlete and wellness advocate. Roll also shares his struggles with alcoholism and his stop-start approach to sobriety. He is honest, humble, and self-reflective throughout. We follow his transformational journey as he pushes himself to exhaustion and beyond as an ultra-runner. His grueling story of taking on a world-record attempt aged 44 to complete five Ironman-distance triathlons in five days across the Hawaiian Islands is fantastic. I felt the pain in every word.
Iāve been listening to Richās excellent podcastsāThe Rich Roll Podcastāfor a couple of years. Heās one of my top five podcasters. One reason for this is his empathy. He genuinely connects with guests from various backgrounds, actively listening and engaging in open conversations. Heās naturally curious, has a knack for knowing which questions to ask, and paraphrases expertly.
Richās experiences with addiction, recovery, and personal transformation have given him a deep understanding of the challenges people face when trying to make significant life changes. And he doesnāt preach, he listens.
2. What Iām Watching
Ted Lasso on Apple TV.
Iām a bit late to the party on this one. The premise initially put me off: an American Football coach hired to manage a struggling English football team. It sounded terrible. But I kept hearing good things about the show, and saw it won a host of awards. So I tried it and just finished the first season. Iām glad I did. The character of Ted Lasso is writing gold.
Ted is unwaveringly optimistic, emotionally intelligent, and believes in people over results. He takes unorthodox approaches to getting the best out of his players, helping them see how unity and teamwork build trust, and how that can create great things. I think his ability to connect with others, together with his positivity and adaptability, resonated with audiences in the post-pandemic world as people asked themselves those bigger questions about their own lives and how they want to live them.
Ted is also a walking collection of puns, rhymes, stories, earnest advice, and dad jokes. But despite it being positioned as a light-hearted series, thereās a lot we can learn from Ted Lasso.
āGuys have underestimated me my entire life. And for years, I never understood why. It used to really bother me. But then one day, I was driving my little boy to school, and I saw this quote by Walt Whitman, and it was painted on the wall there. It said, 'Be curious, not judgmental.' I like that."
- Ted Lasso
3. What Iām Contemplating
Iāve been contemplating āactive listeningā this week because itās the module Iām working on as part of my International Coaching Federation coursework.
Active listening is when we really ātune inā when someone is speaking: listening to what is being said, what isnāt being said, how itās being said, and what feelings or emotions may or may not be expressed. Itās an exceptional skill to master. Remaining silent when someone speaks and giving them your complete attention, repeating back to them what you heard in your own words so they feel understood. Thatās the gift of active listening.
As Stephen Covey wrote in The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, most people donāt listen with the intent to understand; they listen with the intent to reply. I think Iām quite a good listener, but thereās always room for improvement on that journey of personal growth.
4. A Quote to note
āThe greatest gift you can give anyone is your undivided attention.ā
Simone Weil, French philosopher
5. A Question for you
How have you practiced active listening to better understand someone elseās emotions or needs recently?
Want to share this issue of Deep Life Reflections via text, social media, or email? Just copy and paste this link:
https://www.deeplifejourney.com/deep-life-reflections/april-28-2023
Donāt forget to check out my website, Deep Life Journey, for full content on my Pillars, Perspectives & Photography.
And you can read all previous issues of Deep Life Reflections here.
Thanks for reading and have a great weekend.
James