40. The Resilient Lawyer, with Henry Su

Being a trial lawyer is a challenging job even apart from the actual, technical work of lawyering in the courtroom. Legal advocacy often places emotional burdens upon trial attorneys that can be a lot to manage. Henry Su joins the podcast to dissect the various stressors associated with trial work and offers his insights into managing stress through mindfulness.Topics3:27   Occupational hazards of being a trial lawyer 10:09 Toll of adversarial work14:11 Basic obligations to the client16:13 Managing when conflicted19:33 Role of fear26:07 Mindfulness training30:45 Learning from critiques32:49 Developing distress hardiness37:15 “Goblin mode”39:27 Managing electronic intrusions42:13 Resources on wellnessQuote“You want to create distance. What you also want to do is to avoid is dissonance. Dissonance is when you allow the work that you’re doing to kind of infect you, such that you have internal conflict. You’re torn up about it. You’re torn up about why you’re doing this, and that this is not ‘you’ and that these aren’t the values that you hold dear. You want to avoid dissonance, you want to maintain distance.” Henry Su ResourcesHenry Su (bio)Stress Hardiness and Lawyers (article)Integrating Mindfulness Theory into Trial Advocacy (article)Institute for Well-Being in Law (website)The Anxious Lawyer (book)Motion Skills: Online (April, August)Deposition Skills: Online (November)

Om Podcasten

If you’re a litigator or trial lawyer, your life is full—in and out of the courtroom. May the Record Reflect is the podcast of the National Institute for Trial Advocacy, and we know that if something related to lawyering is interesting to us, chances are it’s interesting to you, too. Trial skills, office life, personal development, and more—it’s all fair game on May the Record Reflect.