Erica Brown is the author of the new book Take Your Soul to Work: 365 Meditations on Every Day Leadership. Her many other books include Seder Talk and Happier Endings. She is an educator who currently is the community scholar for The Jewish Center in Manhattan. She is based in the Washington, D.C., area.
Q:
How did you come up with the idea for this book?
A:
In my experience teaching leadership from a spiritual perspective, I saw
firsthand the power of ancient and modern texts to inspire people to be their
best selves even in environments that were demanding, unfriendly or downright
toxic.
Sometimes
we need gentle reminders to put the values we already have to good use. Those
values are not as important in a house of worship as they are in an office
elevator because we know what we stand for when we can uphold our beliefs in
places that challenge them, not only in places that support them.
Q:
You describe Take Your Soul to Work as "essentially a prayer book for
leaders." What role do you see religion playing in the book?
A:
It's not so much religion, because although there are sayings from important
religious leaders of all faiths in the book, there are also thoughts of artists
and writers and politicians.
I
scoured the world of literature and religion to find texts that could give a
quick daily lift on topics ranging from compassion to confusion and offer a
question for daily focus.
I'm
interested in how religion helps people develop and strengthen a code of ethics
and deepen a sense of mindfulness to others and themselves.
Q:
How did you organize the 365 meditations you include in the book? Did you make
changes in how they were ordered, or did they fall into place easily?
A:
Take Your Soul to Work was not an easy book to write because I wanted each page
to be unique and special and touch a spiritual nerve. I tried to put the
meditations in places that I thought would provoke a wide range of thinking for
each calendar week.
Q:
The book was written for leaders in the workplace, but could other people
benefit from it too?
A:
Of course. I think anyone benefits from a daily inner workout. I'm not a CEO,
yet writing this and immersing myself in the wisdom of great masters was very
moving for me.
Why
leaders then? When I surveyed what's out there specifically for leaders, who
often don't have time to read let alone meditate or pray daily, it dawned on me
that this could provide a genuine service to people in positions of power who
want to be more humane, more thoughtful and more generous of spirit in the
place they spend the most hours every day: work.
Q:
What are you working on now?
A:
Right now I am working on a book provisionally called Today's the Day: A
Spiritual Approach to Personal Transformation. I am very interested in the
difficult challenges facing adults in an ever-changing world and how adults
make major life transformations and what holds them back.
The
guiding question throughout the book is "What are you waiting for?"
And through the dozens of interviews I've already conducted, I marvel at how
adults decide to leave a job, leave a relationship, move or change faiths, and
feel the pain at those who want to but lack courage.
Often
people who have the nurturing of supportive faith communities, have strong
personal beliefs, or spend a lot of time in meditation and reflection are able
to make these transformations with more ease and tenderness. They also find
ways to ritualize transitions, which often helps cushion the pain of closing
one chapter and opening another.
Q:
Anything else we should know?
A:
My favorite part of each essay is the guiding question at the bottom of the
page - what I like to think of as "life homework." I don't want
people to think about being more focused, more patient or less angry, I want
them to live it. I think a good question is often the right provocation that
moves people from reading to being.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Erica Brown will be participating in The Lessans Family Annual Book Festival at the JCC of Greater Washington, which runs from November 5-15, 2015.
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