Author Archives: Holly Spence

The Lessons I Learned As a Drama Geek Prepared Me For College Interviews

And Can Prepare You Too!

I’ll admit it: I was a bit of a theater geek in high school. I built sets, sang, dance, but most importantly I learned to smile through my fears and say ‘yes, and?’ to whatever life and my interviews threw at me.

Using The Core Principles of Improv

If I could give you any advice on how to prepare for your college interview, it would be these four words: Be. Prepared. For. Anything.

Have you heard about the interviews with only one question? Or maybe you had a friend whose interviewer arrived late and spent most of the interview talking about Stranger Things? That’s why you, savvy student, need to know which questions might be asked and how to adapt, and adapt professionally, to any scenario.

Say ‘Yes, And?’

Founder of Improv on the Job, Taren Sterry, once said that, “‘Yes, and’ is about accepting and building on what is offered. It’s about listening fully, then responding. It’s about investing in what’s happening in the now.”

Often we can be so focused on planning our next witty joke or impressive anecdote that we forget to truly be in the moment, connect with our interviewer, and notice important subtleties like their tone or the direction of their questions.

“Yes and’ also means that you take full responsibility for keeping the conversation going, and make statements that guide the interview to cover the topics that are most essential to you. By listening completely and giving ‘yes, and’ answers that move your conversation beyond the superficial, you can truly shine during your interviews.

Practice, And Know There Are No Mistakes.

During one memorable interview of mine, I was fiddling with my pen when I accidentally flung it high in the air, only to have it crash down on the floor next to me. I could have frozen or panicked about my now totally awkward interview, but my years in theater had taught me to roll with the punches, no matter how weird things got. I laughed, said ‘guess I was a bit nervous!’ and my interviewer and I ended up cracking up at the whole incident.

Not only should you be willing to laugh at yourself and any mishaps, you should also learn as much as you can about your interview and interviewer in advance. Is it a group or individual interview? Have any students or interviewers blogged online about their experience? Are you expected to dress up or bring a resume? The more you know going into your interview, the more confident you’ll be, even if your pen decides to go for a quick flight during your interview.

It’s All About Teamwork

You can’t choose your interviewer, but you can choose how you react to your interviewer. Your goal as an interviewee is to not just be able to highlight your experiences, goals and how Dream University is the best school for you: it’s also about connecting with your interviewer on a personal level and making them want to advocate for you. This means lots of active listening, demonstrating a genuine interest in what they say and preparing for common interview questions in advance.

You need to prepare for and be able to respond to your interviewer’s questions, no matter how simple (Do you enjoy basketball?), strange (How many rubber bands would you need to build a tower to space?) or profound (What is your purpose?). 

Unsure how to do this?

Stay tuned for part two of this article next week for our list of common college interview questions, and more importantly how to give answers that show you truly understand your interviewer’s priorities and what they’re looking for.

Questions will include:

– Tell me about yourself

– Why this major

– Why this college

– Do you have any questions for me

– Tell me about your activities (this one is deceptively simple!)

See you next week! 

 

Insight College Admissions Counselor 

Holiday Happiness with Insight: Our Favorite Recipes

For many of us, one of our favorite parts of the holidays is the FOOD! We are very blessed to be able to enjoy special meals with our families, and every family has a different recipe that reminds them of the happy holiday time. 

Team Insight is excited to share some of our traditional family recipes with you! If you try any of these, tag us @insight_eddy on Instagram and @Insighteduc on Facebook and Twitter!

Casey: “Kathy’s Dessert” 

We have a family dish that is just known as “Kathy’s Dessert,” after a close family friend. It’s essentially a walnut/chocolate/cream cheese/whipped cream trifle: 

Ingredients: 2 C finely ground walnuts, 2 C sifted flour, 1 C softened butter, 16 oz softened cream cheese, 16 oz Cool Whip, 1 Lg-box instant chocolate/fudge pudding, 1 Sm-box instant chocolate/fudge pudding, Cold milk per pudding instructions, 1/2 C chopped walnuts for topping

Directions: 

1) Mix flour, ground walnuts, and butter, press into bottom of 13″ x 9″ glass baking dish & bake for 20 minutes or until golden brown

2) Beat cream cheese and Cool Whip mixture until evenly blended. Divide in half.

3) Prepare pudding per box instructions.

4) When crust has completely cooled, layer cream cheese/Cool Whip mixture and pudding

5) Sprinkle chopped walnuts on top and serve chilled.

Amy: Latkes and Apple Sauce 

A great simple recipe found HERE

Helena: Ponche de Frutas. 

It’s a kind of cider but with sugarcane (yes – an actual cane of sugar) and tons of seasonal fruit! 

Directions:

1) Simmer for 30min sugar cane, piloncillo, pears, apples, cranberries, guavas, prunes, raisins, orange, cinnamon sticks, and cloves.

2) Remove cinnamon sticks and cloves.

3) Serve in a mug and drink/eat the cider! 

Holly: Carrot and Pineapple Jelly (Jell-o) Salad

I grew up in Australia, so Christmas time was in the middle of a very hot summer for me. My favorite holiday recipe was passed down from my Scottish grandma: Pineapple Carrot Jelly (jell-o) salad. Also known to some as “sunshine salad” 

Directions:

1) Peel 3 large carrots. Discard outer layer. Peel the rest of the carrots into a bowl and set aside

2) Drain a large tin of pineapple chunks and put chunks in the same bowl as the carrot strips.

3) Get a packet of orange and lemon Jelly

4) Make jelly according to instructions on the packet and mix in a large glass bowl

5) Let jelly cool slightly (about 5- 10 minutes)

6) Add carrot and pineapple mixture to jelly and stir, place and leave in the fridge overnight to set!

7) Serve by itself as a salad (just as the Spence family intended!) or use it as a jelly to go with your mains. 

Ally: Candy Cane Cookies 

Ingredients: 1 C sugar, 1 C butter softened, 1/2 C milk, 1 Teaspoon vanilla, 1 Teaspoon peppermint extract, 1 egg, 3 1/2 C all-purpose flour, 1 Teaspoon baking powder, 1/2 Teaspoon salt, 1/2 Teaspoon red food color, 2 Tablespoons crushed peppermint candies, 2 Tablespoons sugar. 

1) Stir together 1 cup sugar, the butter, milk, vanilla, peppermint extract and egg in large bowl. Stir in flour, baking powder, and salt. Divide dough in half. Stir food color into 1 half. Cover and refrigerate at least 4 hours.

2) Heat oven to 375F 

3) Stir together peppermint candy and 2 tablespoon sugar; set aside.

4) For each candy cane, shape 1 rounded teaspoon dough from each half into 4-inch rope by rolling back and forth on a floured surface. Place 1 red and white rope side by side; press together lightly and twist. Place on ungreased cookie sheet; curve top of cookie down to form the handle of cane.

5) Bake 9 to 12 minutes or until set and very light brown. Immediately sprinkle candy mixture over cookies. Remove from cookie sheet to wire rack. Cool completely, about 30 minutes.

Sarah: Eggnog French Toast Casserole with Grand Marnier Whipped Cream & Fresh Berries 

Learn how to make a baked Eggnog French Toast HERE! 

Jenny: Holiday Sugar Cookies

The perfect baking fun to try with your kids! See a great and easy recipe to try HERE!

Zach: Chicken Croustades 

Zach’s wife Tarah makes an appetizer called Chicken croustades, which is grilled chicken, bacon, sprinkled parmesan and chopped tomatoes in filo cups after heating in the oven for about 45 min.

According to Zach – they are awesome! You can find another version of the recipe HERE!

So, Now What? Waiting for your College Application Responses

Now that so many seniors have submitted their college applications, the hard part begins — waiting.

We know it can feel like torture to wait the few weeks or months until college decisions are released, but there are certainly some things you can do in the meantime:

• Make sure your applications are complete. The worst kind of surprise is getting a letter saying your application was not reviewed because it was not submitted properly. Luckily, colleges do a great job of notifying applicants early on if anything is missing. But this typically requires you to check your email and log in to the individual college portals. So do your part.

• Get ready for interviews. Many colleges will offer you the option of an interview with either an admissions officer or an alumnus of the school. Find out which schools offer, recommend or require interviews. If you need to sign up, please do so. And then prepare. Have parents, teachers or mentors hold mock interviews for you. Be ready to answer the most basic questions: Why do you want to attend college X? What do you hope to do with your life professionally? What are your most important activities? Most importantly, get familiar with the interview setting.

• Start thinking money. You should sit down with your parents and talk finances for your first year. Will you be expected to contribute? Will you have a credit card for emergencies? Will your parents give you an allowance each month? Will you need financial aid to cover personal expenses? If you know money will be tight, this is a great time to get a job. Stores are always looking for extra holiday help and with some luck, that temporary job could become one that you have until you leave for school. Don’t assume that your parents are ready or able to support you throughout college.

• Consider financial aid deadlines. If your parents are applying for financial aid, do the research and give them their list of to-dos. Most forms cannot be completed until the start of the new year, but some schools will require forms with estimated numbers to be submitted earlier. This helps those schools to start estimating how much aid they can provide to you.

• Keep up your grades. There is nothing worse than working hard for three years and then having your grades tumble in senior year, damaging your chances of getting into your dream colleges. Many schools will look at your first-semester senior year grades. And all schools reserve the right to rescind your admission if your grades fall below a set criteria. The rule of thumb is no failing grades (Ds or Fs) and try to keep your GPA to where it was before you applied. If you are seriously worried about a specific class, take the steps necessary to bring your grade up. If you know that your grade is going to be a D or an F, get signed up for a replacement course immediately. Your school counselor and Insight counselor can help you figure that piece out.

• Keep up with your activities. Surely you were involved because you loved each activity. So there would be no reason for your involvement to drop. If you decide to try some new activities and as a result trim down on previous ones, that is OK. But if you wrote on your application that you will be involved in certain activities and that college calls to check up, you don’t want to give it the impression that you exaggerated or lied about your involvement. This could cause serious damage to your application.

• Try to have fun. Assuming that you are taking care of the items listed above, try to relax and have some fun — this is your senior year of high school! Find time for your friends, families and most of all yourself. Pursue your hobbies or get involved in new ones. Get the most out of senior activities. There is no better way to take your mind off of the agonizing wait than to have some fun.

You’ll be surprised to see how quickly time flies by and your college decisions will be in your hand. At that point, you will have some major decisions to make.

So until then, congratulate yourself on a job well done and make the best use of your time. Counting the days and minutes will only be more torture. Go out and live your life!

Students + Sleep = Success

It is no secret that teens are not getting enough sleep these days. With endless screen time, mounds of homework and crammed schedules, teens are sacrificing sleep just to keep up. And it is not that they are simply losing a few minutes of necessary winks. According to the National Sleep Foundation, teens should average 9.25 hours of sleep each night, or a minimum of 8.5 hours. But the reality is that more than 85 percent do not get the minimum hours. 

 

Sleep is not just something our bodies like to get; it is one of the most basic needs. A lack of sleep can lead to several short and long-term negative consequences. Students who are sleep-deprived often lack focus, are more apt to have aggressive behavior or just be generally cranky, are more likely to get sick, are more prone to skin problems and are more susceptible to extreme weight loss or gain.

So while most people are aware there are negative consequences to sleep deprivation, we still ignore our bodies’ calls for rest. But here are some steps that teens can take to get more rest each night:

• Create and stick to a regular sleep schedule. While getting the required 9.25 hours might seem unfeasible, it is not unreasonable to aim to jump into bed at 10:30. The key is not letting sleep be last on your priority list. If it is important to you to be asleep at a certain time, make that your priority. You do not need to be up until 2 a.m. each night to get your work done. In fact, I have seen incredibly successful students go to bed at a decent hour.

• Avoid technology late at night. There has been much chatter about the effects of blue light on brain activity and that it stimulates our senses. More importantly, teens are lying in bed texting, Facebooking, chatting or just browsing before going to sleep. The minutes often roll into hours. That combined with the cognitive impact of blue light means less sleep. That late-night browsing is usually unproductive and unnecessary, so cross it off the bedtime routine.

• Study at your desk and not in bed. Your bed should be your haven. Don’t let it be the place where you also study. You should study at your desk. Ideally, your desk is in another room so you can really focus.

• Create a study schedule that works for you to ward off procrastination. All-nighters and late night study sessions are not completely avoidable, but they should not be the norm. Plan to get work done ahead of time so you can limit last-minute study sessions. Create strict goals, such as planning to get essays done three days in advance. The more structured you are with your study habits, the more sleep you will get.

• Sleep at night is better, but naps are a close second. Often, I hear about students who are so exhausted after school that they come home and nap for an hour or two. While they feel refreshed after this nap, they also experience a burst of energy late at night. And hence the cycle continues. If you must nap, aim for a 20-minute power nap and make it a goal to go to bed on time that night.

• Don’t let the weekends throw you off. It can be tempting to stay up late Friday and Saturday and sleep until noon on the weekends. But this simply means that Monday morning is going to be all the more painful. While you don’t need to get up as early on weekends as you do during the week, try not to let your sleep schedule waver by more than 30 to 60 minutes. Your body needs regularity. It does not differentiate between Tuesday and Saturday.

Sleep will always be a necessity. Technology and crazy schedules have now become part of our lives. Rather than pitting our health against these new forces, we have to learn to cope and be disciplined. Teens especially need the extra hours as their brains and bodies are still developing.

 

Creating an Admissions Appropriate Online Persona

The advent of technology certainly has made the college admissions process easier and more accessible to the nearly 2 million high school seniors who apply each year. But it has also made our lives so much more transparent and visible than ever before. And college admissions officers, trying to glean as much as they can about their candidates, have begun turning to the Internet to do so.

While many kids choose to turn off their social media accounts during the important admissions season, I would recommend letting admissions officers into your online lives a little bit more — but do so very carefully.

Most teenagers these days have Facebook accounts, Instagram accounts, and more and more are tweeting regularly. Some are even on LinkedIn hoping to get a jump start on their networking. And while teens typically look to social media for staying connected and keeping up, it can also be a huge opportunity to show admissions officers what you do in your free time.

So follow these steps for creating an admissions appropriate online persona:

• Privatize whatever you don’t want admissions officers to see, whether pictures or posts. While you cannot control what others post, you can control what others see. You should become familiar with the different privacy settings and test them out as soon as possible. If there are pictures up that you definitely don’t want viewed by admissions officers, or anyone, kindly ask the people who posted them to remove them. If your online self simply does not show you in a positive light and no amount of fidgeting with settings will change that, then block anyone you don’t know from seeing your information. But you should also then think about what you post going forward. These sites are not going anywhere and admissions officers and even employers will be checking them out in their decision making process.

• Watch the language. Whether you are tweeting, writing wall posts or making comments, be aware of your language. Definitely no cursing allowed. Write intelligently and thoughtfully. Don’t write anything you would not want your mother to see. Don’t write something that you wouldn’t say in person – just because you have the mask of your social profile, make sure whatever you are saying is something you would be comfortable saying in-person. 

Do damage control. Go through your online profiles for the last two years. If you are unsure about something that is posted, delete it. Err on the side of being too cautious. While admissions officers will not spend hours digging through your profiles, you only have one opportunity to make a first impression, so make sure that any click one would make on your profiles would lead to something interesting and positive.

Post about the positive things in your life! If you had an amazing debate round, or really connected with someone you volunteered with, or had a really amazing volleyball match, feel free to post. If you philosophically disagree with a theory you are learning in economics, are excited about spending the holidays with your favorite cousins, or are counting down the days until the next school dance, feel free to post.

Be yourself and post about things that are important to you. Doing so will let admissions officers learn more about what you think about in your spare time and how you interact with others. If you love to blog about current events, make those blogs public. If you watch all the new movies and immediately write reviews, make those reviews available. You can still be a teenager. You certainly should not try to be someone you are not. Rather, this is an opportunity to highlight what you want others to see — exactly what you are trying to do in your college applications.

Social media makes it easier for people to see what you don’t want them to see, but it can also be a great opportunity to give others a glimpse into who you are. Rather than wasting that chance, make the most of it by making the most of all that technology has to offer.

It’s ACT Day!

The day is finally here. You’ve been preparing for months, worked your way through countless notebooks and #2 pencils, and taken practice test after practice test to get your score where you want it to be.

 

Today is ACT day!  

 

First of all, I urge you to take a moment to pat yourself on the back. No matter the outcome of the test, your hard work and dedication is something you should be proud of.

 

Undoubtedly, you have felt a lot of pressure during preparation time. The morning of the test is time to put those pressures aside, and to focus on getting yourself ready for the test with the following steps:

 

1- Have a healthy, filling breakfast. You may feel a little nervous and not hungry at the time, but a grumbling stomach is the last thing you want to be thinking about as you sit down to write! If you are finding it difficult to eat, begin with a piece of fruit like a banana. Bananas are an excellent source of potassium, which helps deliver oxygen to the brain and keep your mind sharp.

2- Run through a check list of the things you need to bring with you. Your test ticket, photo ID, approved calculator, sharp #2 pencils, and a good eraser are top of the list. Don’t forget your mask and water bottle!

3- Give yourself a little extra time to get to the testing center. A good idea is to check the traffic on the days leading up to the test so you have a rough idea of how long it will take for you to get there. It is nice to be about 10 – 15 minutes early, but not so early that you get restless waiting to begin.

4- Switch off that cellphone! Even better, don’t bring it to the testing center with you, if you can help it.

5- When you sit down the take the test, take a few deep breaths. You are ready, and you’re going to ace it

Think it Through: Early Decision

With Early Decision deadlines just around the corner, it is crunch time for college applicants. As important as it is to submit the highest quality application, it is equally important to make sure that Early Decision is the right option for the entire family.

Early Decision is the admission option through which a student makes a binding commitment to one school if accepted early. Statistics have shown that there is a slight increase in admission chances in the ED round. And the logic makes sense. ED applicants tend to be high-quality applicants who have not only gotten their act together to submit their applications earlier, but also have completed their testing and are satisfied with their grades and other accomplishments.

From the colleges’ perspective, they are getting inundated with top students who are ready to accept an offer of admission. Many colleges will often fill up half of their incoming class with ED applicants, making the regular round more competitive.

Why, and why not? 

With all the pros to applying for Early Decision, many students often wonder, “why wouldn’t I apply ED?”

The answer is simple: financial aid.

The chance of receiving merit-based aid from the given college decreases when a student applies for ED. The colleges simply do not have to woo students in this round with financial incentives when the student has already essentially committed. They would rather use those funds during the regular round to create an incentive for their most highly sought applicants.

All students are guaranteed need-based federal financial aid, assuming they apply. So need-based aid is not in jeopardy. If the college does not provide merit-based aid, then that factor may be irrelevant. However, the financial aid conversation should not stop there. Students may still be applying for Regular Decision to other colleges that do provide merit-based aid. If that is the case and if finances will play a major role in the final college selection plan, many families will choose to forgo the benefits of ED for the chance of saving some money in the long term. In a similar vein, students who have a strong chance of acceptance at an in-state public college, with significantly less expensive tuition than private colleges, will decide not to apply for ED.

Think it through carefully. 

Before jumping into the ED process, families should sit down and really think through all the options. Often, families get so excited about a given school and the prospect of applying for ED that they wait to have the financial conversation. So students should apply for ED if they meet these criteria:

• They are absolutely in love with their ED choice and believe it will be the best school for them in the long term.

• The family is fully prepared to pay either the full cost of attendance or the difference between cost of attendance and financial aid awarded.

• The student would not choose another school based on a lesser overall cost.

• The family would not choose another school for factors other than financial, such as location, size of campus, overall educational experience, personal or familial reasons.

• The decision was made rationally and not just emotionally.

Students who get accepted ED rarely ever regret getting in, but there are cases every year when families receive their estimated financial aid for the ED school and suddenly get very anxious because the aid they received is significantly lower than what they had hoped for. Anxiety typically ensues — not the emotion anyone should feel after an acceptance. Colleges are not obligated to meet the full financial need of families. So it is important to be knowledgeable and to think long term, not just about getting the acceptance offer.

Authenticity is King

Each year a number of my students are admitted and a number are rejected. Such is the life of an admissions counselor.

And on this day, my colleague and I had a similar task: we each were asked by parents of our students to explain the decision their child had received from X dream school. My colleague had the unenviable task of explaining to a family “why” their daughter had been deferred in the early round, and I had the welcome task of explaining to a family “why” their daughter had been accepted when the school seemed such a far reach for her particular profile. Neither of these questions actually have answers, but there are some clues:

The family that was disappointed complained incessantly that other students must be getting different advice, that their parents were doing the work for their children to pad their profiles with science fair accomplishments, and that some were even writing their children’s essays. These things do happen. A lot, sadly.

Yet, the remarkable thing is that this student hadn’t even been rejected. In fact, the school had merely deferred her application to the regular round, which in this case, for this particular school, meant that she was seriously being considered. But the parents described a scene of total chaos and desperation when they read the decision online: “my daughter was sobbing uncontrollably,” the mother said. I wondered if the tears were less about the decision and more about failing to fulfill the astronomically high expectations imposed by her parents.

While this conversation was unfolding, in another office, opposite my colleague, I was writing this email:

Dear ___________,

Of course, I cannot know what exactly went through the minds of the admissions officers as they read your daughter’s application, but a short answer to your question might be the trusty adage: “hire for personality, train for skills.”

Research internships, while impressive are also often attained through either family connections or paying for extremely expensive summer programs. I am not trying to diminish the value, because I do recommend both of these options to students who want to pursue research, but the research experience does not make the scientist (per se). What your daughter displayed in spades throughout her application was a unique combination of determination, grit, compassion, authenticity and self-awareness. You can’t underestimate the value of sincere self-awareness coming through in a college app.

At best, I think I play the role of helping students have the courage to really write what’s true for them and focus less on what colleges “want to hear,” though that may sound ironic coming from a college counselor. Your daughter risked putting who she really is out there for colleges to see and her enthusiasm for her chosen career was both evident and believable because of her authenticity.

I have no doubt that when she encounters the inevitable challenges of college life, she will move through them with the same grace and determination that were evident in her application and life experience thus far. That is the kind of student colleges like __________ are looking for 😉

***

This same mother had written to me a week before early decisions were released and said that she was so proud of her daughter and so grateful for my guidance and that these feelings would not be changed by the outcome of college decisions because she could see reflected in her daughter’s writing the maturity, growth and inner wisdom that had emerged merely from the process of working on college applications.

So on the one side, we have a family and a child who believe that future success is so contingent upon the extrinsic variable of a college decision that all the hard work and energy of a lifetime of academic success have been forever diminished by the evaluation of one school.

On the other side, we have a family and student who believe that even the process of applying was itself a learning and growth experience, as will be the next step and the step after that in this student’s lifelong journey. This dichotomy calls to mind Carol Dweck’s theory of the growth vs. the fixed mindset.  But it also touches on the very heart of why I love my job, why I really do what I do, and what in fact it is that I do when I work with students (at least as I think about it):

I mentor students in becoming the authors of their own lives.

This aspect of my work is present with younger students, but is most evident in drafting personal statements for college applications. When I begin the application process with students, I tell them that if they are open to it, this process does not have to be an onerous task, but holds intrinsic value in the form of self-exploration, reflection and values clarification. When else in your life will you be required to spend weeks, maybe months thoroughly and thoughtfully answering questions like: What matters to you and why? Talk about a time when you challenged a belief or idea, what prompted you to act and would you do it again?

The personal statement, I tell them, is its own genre of literature: it is a short story, in which you are the protagonist and everything that happens is true. And, most importantly, you are both protagonist and author. You may not have control over the events in the story, but you decide what they mean. You cannot be wrong, you can only be honest, and more honest as you peel back the layers and get to the heart of how each story reveals an essential fragment of the whole you.

In her now famous TED Talk, Brene Brown asks the audience: “How many of you associate vulnerability with weakness? Be honest.” Everyone raises their hands. And then she asks, “And how many of you, when you saw vulnerability up here on the stage throughout this week perceived it as ultimate courage.” And just as quickly everyone raises their hands.

That is where the power of the personal narrative lies: in the willingness to be vulnerable, to be seen. As readers, we know it when we see it and it is hard to look away once that courage shows its face.

It doesn’t mean you will get in; it doesn’t mean your great American novel will get published; it doesn’t mean people will like you or will appreciate what you put out into the world. But it is the recipe for building a meaningful life and if you do get in, get the job, get recognized, chances are it will not be what you said, but what you revealed of yourself to which the school, the manager, the audience said YES! 

 

Why Students Need Heartfulness

The Japanese symbol for mindfulness is one of those elegant shapeshifting words that depends on context to reveal its meaning; it combines the symbol for presence with the symbol for mind, spirit or heart—in other words, the familiar concept of mindfulness could also be translated heartfulness. To be mindful is also to have presence of heart. I like to think of it as a moment-to-moment homecoming to the center of my own heart.

I was incredibly fortunate to begin my journey in mindfulness with a teacher who emphasizes the interdependence of mind and heart, Dr. Shauna Shapiro. Too often, mindfulness in its secularized form is treated as a tool to enhance attention, as though the capacity to pay attention can be separated from the attitude we hold toward the object of our attention: how we pay attention matters! “Otherwise,” Dr. Shapiro would say, “a sniper is mindful.”

My own experience as a successful academic, who has struggled for a lifetime with sometimes debilitating anxiety is proof enough to me of the significance of this distinction. At the “pinnacle” of my academic success, I began to experience panic attacks and met all the diagnostic criteria for generalized anxiety disorder. The attitudes of fear, self-judgment, and perfectionism were literally undermining the very rewards I had reaped through years of persistence, concentration and intellectual grit. And now that I work with young people in an area known for intense academic competition, alarming suicide rates, and a sometimes ironic embrace of the mindfulness in education movement, I have never been more sure that heartfulness is what these students need, not mindfulness.

It is a beautiful thing to see a roomful of students earnestly experimenting with the practice of paying attention to the breath, resting in the being mode rather than the doing mode that so much of their lives demands. But as anyone who has tried one minute of mindfulness already knows, even when the body is perfectly still, the mind can be a war zone. Students quickly find that paying attention to the breath is not as easy as it sounds. Or as one student of mine asked, “Sarah, I get that we’re supposed to pay attention to the breath, but what is it we’re supposed to be doing while we’re paying attention to the breath?” My answer was: “Exactly.”

“The key is this,” I tell them, “Your mind will wander, that’s what minds do. The practice of mindfulness is actually noticing that the mind has wandered off and gently, with kindness inviting it back to the breath.”

The word kindness here is not trivial, but essential. It is what I mean when I say heartfulness. Our habits of mind, my students’ and my own, are not generally kind. They tend to be self-critical, often harsh, unforgiving. “This is so simple, why can’t I do it? If I can’t even pay attention to my breath, no wonder I can’t understand math!” “Come on, Sarah, just pay attention!!” Sound familiar? The voices we hear growing up become the voices in our heads.

Heartfulness is this: “Oh, I’ve wandered off again, here I am, welcome home.” With practice, this voice gets stronger; the heart grows. The mind does not change, what changes is how we relate to it and thus how we relate to ourselves.

The temptation among many of my bright, driven students, and I would argue the temptation to the Western mind in general because of our cultural conditioning, is to immediately apply the goal-orientation mode to mindfulness itself. This has resulted in a mindfulness “boom” that emphasizes how mindfulness reduces stress, enhances cognitive skills and helps students and professionals become more successful. While a growing body of research supports these claims, the language of the mindfulness revolution often forgets to tell the story of how mindfulness grows the heart and how like the opening of a bud, this process unfolds according to its own timetable; it cannot be forced.

Though I am familiar with the effects of mindfulness on grey matter density and cortical thickness, working memory capacity and insight problem solving, the mechanisms by which mindfulness generates positive effects are still tantalizingly mysterious. What’s more, as I walk by classrooms every day overflowing with students taking their 9th, 10th, 17th practice SAT, I am struck by the overwhelming evidence that these students are not incapable of paying attention.

Likewise, at home, I have watched my 14-year-old play video games, sometimes without eating, for hours on end. Trust me, it is not the muscle of attention that needs more exercise. It is paying attention when bored, paying attention when scared, paying attention when disoriented, insecure, vulnerable, and sometimes remembering to pay attention when happy that is the real struggle. Paying attention in these moments, above all, requires self-compassion and kindness, a presence of heart, without which the mind cannot stay with the pain and discomfort.

I tend to see it this way: What is procrastination if not a desperate flight from some internal or external experience, which we find difficult or impossible to accept with openness, receptivity and dare I say it, love? Without love, we cannot open to what is really here: Fear? Boredom? Self-doubt? The voice that says, “You’ll never be good at this, give up.”

Our attention is empty if it is not a container that invites these voices to speak. The transformation from mindless to mindful is catalyzed by the lovelight we shine on the dark corners of our inner world. If we want the bud to open, to smell, taste, live the benefits of mindful practice, the light of our own mind must be like the soft warmth of the sun. The invitation of mindfulness is not simply to pay attention, but to attend with kindness, to nourish the seeds of who we will become with a light that does not judge the seed for beginning its journey in the dark.  

 

Fitting in: Enough is Enough

You are probably expecting me to say that “fitting in” is a myth, that what matters is being yourself and not sacrificing your values and your authenticity for the sake of gaining approval. But before I offer that advice, which I inevitably will, let’s pause and acknowledge that we are in some sense wired to “fit in.”

Human beings are profoundly social creatures. We crave affection, admiration, and acceptance from others and this is not a bad thing. Our capacity to cooperate, coupled with the depth and complexity of our emotional lives is perhaps the essential evolutionary advantage that has carried us from our hunter-gatherer days to the days of Facebook and LinkedIn.

Furthermore, developmental psychology describes adolescence as a time in which the key learning and growth opportunities occur in the context of group identity, alienation, fidelity, peer pressure, and experimenting with new roles. In other words, asking oneself again and again, “Who am I? And do people like me?” I offer these frames of reference as a way of saying it’s perfectly normal to want to “fit in” and it’s perfectly normal to want to stand out. Between these poles of carving out a unique identity and finding our “tribe,” we come to an understanding of our own truth. It is truly a life’s work.

So what is fitting in? Is it being accepted by others? Do we have to be “like” other people to “fit in” with them?

Contemplating these questions brought me back to my own high school days when I wondered if I was popular (enough), attractive (enough), smart (enough), talented (enough). It’s that implied “enough” that captures one aspect of what “fitting in” means. But it can be hard to pin down exactly for whom we hope to be “enough.” For ourselves? Our parents? Our peers? Society?

When I read student essays, I often see this word “society” pop up as though there exists a set of monolithic standards, imposed on us all by a jury we call “society,” or sometimes “culture.” But the way I see it, who we hope to be and who we are change in the course of a single day, as we relate to others through our different roles: student, daughter, friend, wall flower, psychologist, stepmother, breadwinner. In other words, the jury is always changing. It changes many times in one day and infinite times throughout our lives.

Though the roles you play in life will evolve, you will always crave the acceptance, love and admiration of your peers, family, and colleagues. I can honestly say that at my age I do not worry about “fitting in,” but I do care about feeling connected, cultivating community and feeling a sense of belonging in myself and in the world. Experiencing a sense of belonging– to loved ones, in a chosen profession, within a community, whether that community is large or just a few close friends you can count on one hand, imbues life with a sense of purpose. The key is, to arrive at this place, to experience belonging as I have described it here, we have to cultivate compassion, not only toward others, but more importantly, toward ourselves.

This is why I have resisted the temptation to advise you to simply “be yourself.” I worry that even “being yourself ” becomes a new yard-stick against which we do or do not measure up. The best advice I can offer you is not to “be yourself,” but to be kind to yourself. You will change, you will make mistakes, you will wake up some days and feel confident, you will wake up other days and feel insecure, you will at times succumb to peer pressure, at other times you will find in yourself courage, resilience and inner strength that you did not know you possessed.

You can choose to look at these experiences through the eyes of an internal critic, who asks even of your accomplishments, “Are they enough?” Or you can choose to listen to the voice that says, “You are enough,” or as my own mother used to say to me: “You are perfectly imperfect just the way you are.”

Which brings me to the role that parents can play in helping children to navigate the minefield that is adolescence. Let me start by making an important distinction: helping your child cultivate self-acceptance is not the same as being a permissive parent. It is possible to have high hopes for your child and at the same time maintain an awareness that these hopes will not always come to fruition and that our own dreams for our children are not always the same dreams our children have for themselves.

In my role as an admissions counselor, working primarily with Cupertino area schools, I have to be honest and say that, more often than not, I see students who at this crucial juncture in their lives feel incredible pressure to become something that they are neither suited for nor deeply passionate about. They also feel compelled to apply to a long list of colleges with names that will impress rather than a short list of schools that represent the best fit for their personalities and interests. It has happened that I’ve seen a few students who are so focused on their future profession that I have no doubt they will be both successful and fulfilled in their careers, but it is understandably rare to encounter that degree of focus in a 16 or 17-year-old.

And the truth is, the indicators of future success that make me most hopeful about a particular student are not test scores, GPA or college admissions profile, but the student’s attitude toward life, toward set-backs, toward the influence of their peers, an ability to keep things in perspective. They are the students who have the capacity to listen to the voice that says, “You are enough.” And they can hear that voice because it is the internalization of a voice that has echoed throughout their lives, since the moment of their birth.

If I get really honest, brutally honest, I can also say that as a stepmom, I find it incredibly challenging to let go of the high hopes I have for my own beloved stepchildren. I know the deep urgency to protect and shield one’s child from the pain of failure. I know the shame and embarrassment of wondering what other people will think if my own kid doesn’t get good grades, or get in to school X —after all, it’s my job!

I also know that much of this fear has less to do with my children than it does with my own struggle to be kind—not to them—but to myself. What I can least tolerate in myself, I can least tolerate in others, including, and perhaps most intensely felt, in the others with whom I share my home and heart.

So my advice is both simple and incredibly challenging: be the voice of compassion for yourself and be that voice for your child, so that when peer pressure comes knocking in one of its many disguises, your child can say, “I don’t need to ‘fit in,’ I already belong and that is enough.”

Thank you for joining us for Wellness Month. Please check back next week for more information and advice from our Insight Counselor Sarah de Sousa. 

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A version of this blog post was first published in Lynbrook High School’s truth publication, Aletheia, Vol. 2(7)

Additional Resources:

Letters to a Young Poet, by Rainer Maria Rilke. This book was given to me on my 16th birthday by a mentor and has been a constant companion in my life ever since.

How Children Succeed: Grit, Curiosity and the Hidden Power of Character, by Paul Tough. The story we usually tell about childhood success is the one about intelligence: success comes to those who score high on tests, from preschool admissions to SATs. But in How Children Succeed, Paul Tough argues that the qualities that matter most have more to do with character: skills like perseverance, curiosity, conscientiousness, optimism, and self-control.

The Romance of Risk: Why Teenagers do the Things They Do, by Lynn E. Ponton M.D. In The Romance of Risk, Dr. Ponton refutes the traditional idea that risktaking is primarily an angry power struggle with parents—so-called teenage rebellion—and re-defines it as a potentially positive testing process whereby challenge and risk are the primary tools adolescents use to find out who they are and determine who they will become. For adolescents, the powerful allure of the adult world is equaled only by the fear of failing to find a place in it. Parents can ease that transition into adulthood, however, by promoting healthy risk-taking so that dangerous options will be avoided.

Hardwiring Happiness, by Rick Hanson Ph.D. Rick Hanson, Ph.D., is a neuropsychologist and author of Hardwiring Happiness, Buddha’s Brain, Just One Thing, and Mother Nurture. Founder of the Wellspring Institute for Neuroscience and Contemplative Wisdom, and an Advisory Board Member of the Greater Good Science Center at UC Berkeley, he’s been an invited speaker at Oxford, Stanford, and Harvard, and taught in meditation centers worldwide.

Greater Good Science Center http://greatergood.berkeley.edu The Greater Good Science Center studies the psychology, sociology, and neuroscience of well-being, and teaches skills that foster a thriving, resilient, and compassionate society. This website is full of educational and parenting resources, free webinars, links to many bay area events and excellent resources for teens.

Stanford School of Medicine Center for Compassion and Altruism Research and Education (CCARE) http://ccare.stanford.edu CCARE investigates methods for cultivating compassion and promoting altruism within individuals and society through rigorous research, scientific collaborations, and academic conferences. In addition, CCARE provides a compassion cultivation program and teacher training as well as educational public events and programs.