Buddhist Teacher Offers Meditation Way for Business

by Kathy KeeserSpecial to iBerkshires
Print Story | Email Story

Photos by Kathy Keeser
Michael Carroll, the speaker at a recent Berkshire Entrepreneurs Network forum, talks with BEN members Wendy Jill Krom and Bethany Perron.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — How can the seeming opposites of Buddhism, a spiritual practice that emphasizes meditation and the observance of moral precepts, and the striving of business mix in today's world?

By slowing down and reflecting, you can function better, says Michael Carroll, author of "Awake at Work" and "The Mindful Leader."

Carroll was the speaker a Berkshire Entrepreneurs Network forum at the Unitarian Church last month on "How Mindful Mediation Can Help Us Build Successful, Healthy Careers" and how to bring Buddhism into business as a "Mindful Leader."

"I am tired of being sold this bill of sale, that we have to have more, that we accept society and business as they are," said Carroll, whose studied Tibetan Buddhism since 1976. "I am cynical of society. ... Instead, we can create a society where we have a compassionate society."

An authorized teacher in the Kagyu Nyingma lineage of Tibetan Buddhism, he has held executive positions with high-level companies including Simon & Schuster and The Walt Disney Co., and continues an active consulting business with Fortune 500 companies and others.  

"Being a Mindful Leader is especially important in this disorienting time when many people don't know what to do next or how to get through these times," said Carroll. "Being a Mindful Leader means to take a new spiritual course and, though we all want security, a Mindful Leader also considers how [he or she] contributes to their world."

Mindful Leadership emphasizes truthfulness and clarity of being; being honest about our relationship with work and why are we doing it; working to fully engage our minds; being comfortable with ourselves and completely who we are while in touch with the world; rising above toxic work environments by treating others with respect and helping to find a level of health and well-being for others; and developing an ease of being where you are comfortable simply to be here, not always striving to be somewhere else.  


Meditation is an important path towards being a Mindful Leader and achieving successful, healthy careers, Carroll told the several dozen participants during the hourlong talk.

For the last 15 minutes of the session, he took the members of the audience through a meditation exercise that can easily be done sitting anywhere, with a simple posture with your eyes open so that "you can be completely engaged." Carroll said it is important in teaching to develop a mind that is fully awake. He reminded the audience that he didn't have "the" answer, but suggested that through Mindful Leadership, an individual finds mindfulness in their self and extends — not inflicts — it to others.  

Carroll obviously sparked interest in the group, answering questions and staying to talk afterward with several members.  

The business group is an educational and social support network for small businesses, especially "solopreneurs," said organizer Wendy Jill Krom. 

"I am very pleased with the turnout for tonight's event and I thought Michael did an awesome job keeping the audience interested and helping them understand how to be a Mindful Leader," she said. "I have read both of his books and really love what Michael has to say and think it is really important for everyone, especially business people to hear."   

BEN President Peter Coombs invited participants to attend the next social gathering and information session on Tuesday, June 9, from 5:30 to 7:30 at Zucchini's Restaurant. The topic of the evening will be on "Twitter 101: How and Why to Use It."

To be added to the BEN e-mail list,  contact elist@berkshireentrepreneursnetwork.org ; for membership information, membership@berkshireentrepreneursnetwork.org.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Striking Out Cancer in Berkshires Holds Sunday Party Before June 27 Games

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires.com Sports
PITTSFIELD, Mass. – Striking out Cancer in the Berkshires has been bringing smiles for half a decade.
 
This year, it also is bringing Smiley.
 
A day of community baseball and softball games that act as a fund-raiser for the Jimmy Fund is the brainchild of Joe DiCicco, who has expanded the event’s footprint over the years and seen a steady growth in money raised as a result.
 
This year’s games are scheduled for 9:30 a.m. on June 27 on Buddy Pellerin Field at Clapp Park.
 
But the festivities begin this Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Sideline Saloon on Fenn Street, where DiCicco invites families to come down, free of charge, to take photos with a Boston Red Sox World Series Trophy and meet Boston mascot Wally the Green Monster and Smiley, the mascot of the Triple-A Worcester Red Sox.
 
“It’s just a little way to give back to the community to start the week,” DiCicco said. “Last year, we had the trophy for the first time, and they want to bring it back, so that’s a good thing. Wally is different, and so is Smiley.”
 
What has not changed is DiCicco’s dedication to the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute’s Jimmy Fund, inspired by Einar Gustafson, a child who beat cancer with the help of Dr. Sidney Farber in 1948 and shared his story with the world under the name Jimmy to protect his anonymity.
 
View Full Story

More Pittsfield Stories