Learning Compassion and Connection OUrselves and then teaching it to the Rising Generations

I came across a blog post today from Tim Elmore that addresses some considerations on leading the next generations. I have learned in my life and in working with families that we as human beings follow example more than anything else that we will encounter - if that example resonates and touches our hearts. I liked this article but as I thought about how it could impact my life and the lives of my family and the families I work with, I realized that what is recommended for the younger generations very much applies to the older generations. I hope you enjoy it. If you would like to have a conversation please let me know. Warmly,

Scott Mathewson

The link to the article is below:

https://growingleaders.com/blog/five-ways-to-develop-empathy-generation-z/

In May 2007, an Iraqi artist named Wafaa Bilal decided to move into a gallery space in Chicago. He planned to do a 30-day experiment on “empathy” in light of what had happened to his brother In Iraq. His brother had been killed by an airstrike from a drone that was shot by a soldier far away. Wafaa was shocked by how the shooter could emotionally disconnect from the targets he shot at, even when they’re human.

Wafaa’s experiment would allow him to observe empathy levels in people when they are allowed to hurt someone from a distance. Boy, did he learn a lot.

His gallery space could be seen online by anyone around the world. In the room was a desk, a lamp, a bed and a paintball gun rigged to a camera that users could take aim and shoot anything in that room, anytime, day or night.

What happened?

Ordinary people from multiple nations shot him with that paintball gun more than 70,000 times. He was stunned and saddened by how anonymous people hurt him. Others shot at the lamp, the desk or the other items in the room. In just 30 days, Wafaa discovered what a disconnected, isolated and fractured world we live in. Why would people who don’t even know him choose to shoot at him?

The War For Kindness

Stanford researcher Jamil Zaki wrote the book this year called, The War for Kindness, Building Empathy in a Fractured World. In the book, Zaki attempts to discover if technology and modern life make us less caring. Are we more desensitized and jaded when it comes to suffering?

Jamil talks about an experiment that was done at a shopping mall (public space) where a table and bucket are set up for donations to be made to needy children. They wanted to discover what moved people toward empathetic generosity? At times, they stationed a child in a wheelchair next to the table; at other times, no one at all. Sometimes they would post photos of hungry or disabled children next to the table and at other times they’d post faces of happy, smiling children.

What they discovered was insightful.

The researchers discovered that not only did people donate less when a disabled child or a photo of a disabled child was nearby, people actually walked further away from the display, avoiding contact with the opportunity to give. When they spoke to those people—especially young people—about this reaction, researchers found out why. Teens would say things like: “I am sad enough in my life right now; I don’t want to be even sadder.”  Or, they’d say: “I’m fighting depression,” or “I am already overwhelmed with everything in my life, so I don’t need anything else to worry about.”

Very telling.

Too Much Exposure, Too Little Empathy

Usually, students are challenged by over-exposure, not by not being exposed enough.

Generation Z is overwhelmed and over-exposed. They are growing up in a world that is more isolated, more polarized and more de-humanized, by screens and content with which they’ve been exposed. Sadly, while we see more needs around us than ever, we’ve become more jaded by it at times. We feel “sad” and want to avoid sadness. Exposure without application can do that to anyone. The glass will always seem half-empty unless we choose to fill the glass.

Jamil Zaki believes we need to create an “Empathy Gymnasium.”

Building an Empathy Gymnasium for Generation Z

The only way people become stronger in any area is if they “work out” those muscles.

Here are five fundamentals we can insert into kids’ lives to kindle empathy in them:

1. Place them with people who are different.

One way to begin to develop empathy is to expose students to those who are different than them, so they begin to see that “different” doesn’t mean “bad.” As my kids grew up, we got them involved with an ethnically diverse theatre arts program; we also took them to feed homeless men and women downtown. They saw how “normal” those people are, very much like them in many ways.

2. Expose them to needs and suffering up close.

I took my children overseas for them to see war-torn Croatia and Bosnia in the 1990s as well as low-income Kingston, Jamaica. Once they got up close and could not avoid the obvious—it had an impact on them. These exposures must be up-close and personal. Close enough for them to see, feel, smell and hear the needs of others. TV shows or YouTube are not enough.

3. Introduce them to problems that are unique.

Sometimes we withdraw in our comfort zones because we are unsure about the unknown. We feel unsafe or insecure. I found when students see unique problems that capture their imaginations, it cuts through the noise and clutter of their minds. It stands out when it’s different. One of my students grew passionate to get homeless people’s shoes when he saw how many had none.

4. Enable them to reflect on how it’s relevant.

Kids feel empathy when they reflect on the relevance of another’s suffering. Research works best when it’s “me-search,” involving needs they can identify with. My daughter was intrigued by diabetes as I allowed her to give me my insulin shots or test my blood sugars. We tried to demonstrate empathy when someone lost a loved or were hurt in some way. Their pain was our pain.

5. Help them take one step in response.

Empathy is cultivated when students observe suffering and it leads to action. In fact, the way we enable students to prevent becoming jaded or cynical is to find one action step whenever they see someone in pain. In Wafaa Bilal’s paintball experiment, he was heartened when anonymous people stopped by his gallery to replace a broken lamp or light bulb. The empathy muscle grows when information (about someone’s pain) leads to application.

Rules

Rules

I listened to an interesting podcast while out on my bike at lunch today. The person being interviewed talked about life rules that he lives by.  What I liked about these rules was that they encapsulated so much more than what the actual words seem to convey by themselves because there is purpose behind them. 

As I began my comeback from chemotherapy for a chronic form of cancer a year ago, I adopted a new life rule. It is: I comfortably wear 34 inch waist pants.  The back story is that I developed a penchant for Nutella and graham crackers while going through cancer treatment that helped me to blossom by about 15 pounds over my former lean bike racing self.  The graham crackers and Nutella served their purpose at the time because they made me feel better. When I completed the treatments it was time for something better.

I became a student of and made some life changes to my already healthy diet over the past 12 months that have paid off.  I am now down 12 pounds with 3-4 more to go. I am also happy to say that when I received the results of my post-treatment testing today, that my blood markers have significantly improved over where they were years ago, pre-cancer diagnosis, and now for the first time in my life are in the normal range.  So, my life rule (34 inch waist), which led to lifestyle changes that have helped me tremendously, is a good rule.

I believe that families are served well by such rules that they come up with together. Our family…….. Our family helps each other or our family makes the world better because….. are a couple of examples. I have seen family rules work as strong unifiers when the family comes up with them together over time. Long term, such rules or unifying words to live by can make a tremendous positive difference in the trust and culture of a generational family.

We look forward to helping your family discover your powerful rules that will strengthen your family and act as a guiding light for the great things your family will yet accomplish.

Warmly,

Scott Mathewson

Founder

"I get it!" Why a recent family meeting was really awesome!

Why a recent family meeting was really awesome!!

Of course the names and locations are changed to protect the family’s privacy.

Part way through a family meeting, a son looked at his dad and said: “I get it! I get it! I understand what you have been saying all along! If we are good stewards and take care of what you and mom have created, and teach our kids to do the same thing, it (the family’s financial assets) will do the same thing for our kids and grand kids!

This young man then thanked his mom and dad for their sacrifice and for letting him be part of the process.

 This statement was a very satisfying payday for me and a couple I work with as we had a family meeting recently.  The patriarch (Jay) had asked me a few months earlier to help him discuss and guide the preparation of some trusts to receive a gift of stock in some family owned business enterprises owned by him and his wife (Sally) for the benefit of their children. He had spent some time with some other professionals and felt like he was getting nowhere and was actually confused by all the jargon. It all seemed to be very complicated and he asked me to help.

My first question to him was: “What is your purpose in doing this?” He told me it was to save tax (which is usually the first thing I hear)* and “because he wanted to start preparing his children to take over so he could step back a little.” He also wanted to make sure that a transition occurred as smoothly as possible if we “lost” him. Ultimately Jay and Sally wanted their family to be able to take over and to reduce strife when that happened.

It became apparent that, like in all families, there were concerns about the capability of their children and what the future held. I suggested that we spend some time identifying what the purpose of their wealth was. The WHY of what they were doing. I am grateful that they accepted this challenge because it produced some great beginnings in their quest to figure things out for their family.

As we went through our process, it emerged that Jay and Sally had built their lives on a strong foundation of honesty, hard work, generosity and integrity.  They struggled however with divulging the extent of the wealth they had created with their children because they thought it would remove incentive to work and be productive human beings.  Also, one of their children, who worked in the business, had been making some choices that would not ultimately lead to good outcomes if he were in charge, unless he made some course corrections.

 Note: I have learned that talking about our choices is not as effective as talking about the why behind our choices.  If the why is really understood and agreed upon by the family; meaningful progress can be made.

Talking about the WHY or the Purpose of a family’s wealth will go much further to change behavior than talking about the behavior. Behavior is a manifestation of choices spurred by beliefs and life experiences.

Our process:

In our process, we start by laying out the WHY according to the senior generation’s view of the world. Usually this ‘WHY’ has not been thought through sufficiently, written down and communicated. The next generation is often conflicted and unsure about what is coming and what is expected of them….or even what the possibilities are.

If the Purpose and ‘WHY’ of the senior generation can be articulated and formalized in the beginning, it can act as a foundation for family discussions to build on. It can also be a catalyst for unifying discussions.

The family’s purpose MUST then include the input ‘Why’ of the next generations, if it is to be meaningful and have impact on behavior and decisions that each generation makes going forward.

What does your estate return look like?

We also prepare a pro-forma estate settlement diagram that shows how the current family financial balance sheet flows through the estate settlement process based on today’s estate planning documents, so the senior generation and the next generations can see what happens when the estate transitions. 

in the case of the family mentioned above, once we had the Wealth Purpose Statement and pro-forma estate settlement diagrams completed, we prepared for a family meeting to talk about the family’s wealth and to share Jay and Sally’s purpose (their WHY) with their family.

We had a family meeting. It was in this meeting when the ‘lights turned on” for the son that Jay and Sally are worried about.

The meeting opened up a very healthy dialog between Jay and Sally, their children and in-laws. It led to other discussions. The family has bought in and as more effective communication has been created and is ongoing, they have a higher probability of their transition being successful (and avoiding the shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves in three generations proverb). This is because what is being implemented has been created with consensual buy in among all family members. If the children have a voice, the family will end up with a better outcome because they (the children) helped design and build what they will be living with as they move ahead in their own lives.

Elevare (with the help of legal council) has helped to design and build trusts that will own stock, updated the couples estate plan and we are working with the family to create and implement the governing documents that outline how the trusts interact with the businesses. All this has been done in a way that Jay and Sally and their children have agreed will work best for them.  We are now having continued discussions and the family is implementing strategies that will help prepare the family members to take on a greater role and ultimately take over and be successful with the family wealth and stewardship.  

Final thought:

Your wealth will have impact on your family if you purposefully address it or not, so why not make the effort and have the conversations now, so it can have a positive impact later?

I have learned over the past 32 years that the next generation does not prepare heirs for transition simply by creating estate planning and documentation. Rather, preparation and ultimately successful transition of wealth occurs because of good communication and trust among family members, prepared heirs and because the family is united in their purpose. There has to be intentional and authentic discussions between all family members where everyone’s voice is heard and appreciated.

We look forward to helping you work towards a better outcome and in helping you avoid the shirt sleeves to shirt sleeves proverb in your family.

Warmly, 

Scott Mathewson

Founder

Elevare

801-984-8175

www.Elevarellc.com

 

*Gifting assets into trusts can ultimately save estate tax if the value of what is gifted increases in value and can be a great way to move growth from an estate that is increasing in value.  Jay and Sally wanted to keep the business in the family, so estate tax savings was a possibility here.