Archive for September, 2007

“How do you handle someone who is being obnoxious?”

That was a question put to me recently when I talked to a group having their annual Civility Awareness day at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center at Worcester.

We explored how best to encourage civility – which goes beyond mere politeness. The UMass credo on civility offers these tips:

  • “Conduct yourself with integrity, courtesy, and respect toward fellow members of our community.”
  • “Hold individuals accountable for their actions.”
  • “Promote an environment where individuals feel safe and supported.”

These rules for civility in a workplace are heartening; I’m pleased that an organization has focused on how to upgrade the quality of interactions among everyone who works there, as well as with patients.

People at work in any organization face a panoply of forces that easily overpower the urge to be civil: stress, multi-tasking, too much to do with too little time, or too little support. Stress and distractedness – not meanspiritness – are the most common enemies of civility at work.




Featured podcasts

  • Daniel Goleman and Larry Brilliant, Part 1.  Brilliant -- medical doctor, philanthropist, humanitarian, and Executive Director of Google.org -- discusses "compassionate capitalism" in business practices. Download now.

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Wired to Connect - Dialogues on Social Intelligence

Daniel Goleman and Richard Davidson in conversation:

Neuroscientist Richard Davidson explains how the brain's social and emotional circuitry becomes shaped to give each of us a unique "brain style" in reacting to life – hair trigger or slow to react, feeling strongly or weakly, recovering quickly or slowly. Davidson's research on meditators suggests we can take a more active role in reshaping our brains, and our emotional response, for the better.

Available exclusively from More Than Sound Productions: