Showing posts with label Jones Walker Wiley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jones Walker Wiley. Show all posts

Monday, August 3, 2020

JONESWALKERWILEY AT AGE 4: HOW WE’VE KEPT IT TOGETHER


We have now passed the fourth anniversary of this enterprise. We began this blog July 7, 2016, with our introductory posting, “We are JonesWalkerWiley, and Here’s Why You Should Care.” During the ensuing four years, we’ve offered over 150 posts on a wide range of topics. It’s been fun and we’re just getting started.

People ask us occasionally how we’ve held this together. Why haven’t three headstrong lawyers, each with opinions on anything and everything, broken apart and gone their separate ways?  Leaving aside the fact we were friends before we started this and plan on keeping things that way after we’re done, we have identified reasons we’re still going strong. These ideas might even apply in other life circumstances.

Maximize strengths; minimize weaknesses – Let’s face it. Most people aren’t good at
everything they do. In group endeavors, it’s important that members identify the areas in which they can make significant contributions and those where someone else may offer more. So it is with this project. One of us excels at ideas, another at challenging conventional wisdom. Yet another has a facility for getting things on paper, so we always have something from which we can work as posting time approaches. Two of us contribute most by commenting on drafts, not composing original work. Sticking with our strengths and avoiding what we’re not as good at produces a better product and reduces tension.

Learn about saliency - We all take pride in what we do. Pride of authorship, however,
can prevent improving a post if the person who drafted a segment or revised a piece clings irrationally to the notion they’ve found the holy grail on that topic. So, we each pick our battles, going to the mat over things we really, really care about (high saliency) and backing off on things that aren’t as important (low saliency).


Remain rhetorically sensitive - Rhetorical sensitivity defines a person’s susceptibility to persuasion. Though some people pride themselves on never changing their minds, each of us will hear out and consider the ideas of our collaborators. Often, we each start with a firm idea of how the world should work on something we’re writing about, but discover later someone else has a better approach. We see the capacity for that as a strength. 

Know when to hold ‘em; know when to fold ‘em – This line from the late Kenny Rogers’s hit song The Gambler offers great
advice for working in groups. Sometimes, your view won’t carry the day because you don’t have the cards.  When you realize that’s the case, give it up and fight another day. We write a new piece almost every week. It’s impossible any one of us will have the best idea every time, whether the issue is what we should write about, what we should say, or how we should say it.


Concurring and dissenting opinions are welcome, but not simply for the sake of disagreement – If you’ve followed us for any part of these four years, you know we seek consensus in our posts. We try speaking with one voice. Usually we do that, showing that
with enough care and compromise we can find common ground on the most difficult issues. We work hard at letting our readers know what we think and why and we avoid telling others what they should think. Admittedly, we have similar political ideologies, but within that broad framework, we have disagreements that require smoothing out if we are to speak with that one voice. We acknowledge, for example, that Rob, though decidedly progressive, harbors conservative instincts that bring him into conflict with Woodson’s more aggressive liberalism (Henry often ends up in the middle, with a slight tilt in Woodson’s direction on many, though not all, issues). Sometimes we can’t work out a compromise, so we write separately, with each person expressing his considered opinion. That’s useful from time to time, but we prefer reaching consensus if we can.


Critique work, not workers – No one can keep a project like this going for four years if the critiques become personal. Revisions of, additions to, and subtractions from text must represent comments on the work, not personal attacks on the intelligence, intellect, or skill of whoever produced the work. Groups in which that occurs fail quickly. Every
suggestion one of us makes for improving a post represents a considered judgment that such a change will give our readers a better product. When critiques become personal, we probably should each find something else to do.


We have not enjoyed a seamless journey, always adhering to all we proclaim here. At times we have violated our own mandates. We have, however, recognized our failures, admitted them, and reset our commitment to a friendship and a project. 


We write what we write here hoping it provokes thought and educates the public.
Though we’re part-timers at this, we want our voices in the marketplace of ideas. We’re grateful for the readers who follow us and provide feedback on what we write (keep those comments coming, folks). The pleasure is all ours.

Saturday, July 7, 2018

PASSIONS-A JOURNEY



Now we present the final installment in our passion series-personal explorations of what motivates each of us.  It’s Henry’s turn.

Unlike my coauthors, Rob and Woodson, my passions are not so agenda specific or definable.  My passions may be
easier to describe than declare. Permit me to start with a statement and then provide some history required by that statement. When dealing with passions my mind is like a rigged roulette wheel, where the slots allow the ball to only settle for a moment, then move on to the next slot, drawing attention instead to the wheel - the circle pointing toward meaning.



As a youngster I seemed to have two overriding interests,
baseball and learning about this world and its inhabitants.  If I wasn’t reading or asking questions I was playing baseball, watching baseball games, listening to baseball games on the radio with my father, debating baseball issues with my friends, committing baseball statistics to memory, or dreaming of a major league career.

As I matured, I read more and more. Walking into a library
always resulted in pure and overwhelming joy because of all those shelves contained. I wanted to know how individual bits of information related to a bigger picture I knew nothing about.  My mother and dad attempted to answer every question and I’m sure I was a complete nuisance.  My teachers and other adults did the best they could with my insistence on answers and I thank them all. 



My interests about which I can say I was or am passionate, have multiplied over the years. They have included volunteering in my community and church, golf, tennis, and spiritual inquiry.  I list these only as examples of interests I could label passions.


As I grow older, I still experience joy when I enter a library or bookstore, but I feel a twinge of sadness because I realize I can’t consume all that is there.  That discomfort has helped me perhaps gain some understanding of my passions. The discomfort requires that I choose the joy I experience each day rather than hover in the cloud that regret or ennui produces. 


I find now that although learning is a passion the other
interests may or may not be defined as passions.  They are pleasures I enjoy but what I derive from them may be more important.  I now find I am consumed with helping others feel the joy I receive from life each day no matter what the particular interest. My passion is finding
ways to help move me, my wife,children,grandchildren, friends and all whom I encounter toward this joy.    Whether I’m experiencing a quiet time with my wife, greeting a stranger with a smile or following my grandkids to their many activities this desire is always present.



I wish to learn as much as I can for as long as I can and to transfer my joy to all those I can.