The Power of Collaboration

Jun 3
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As the Symphonic Profiles series gets underway, one common thread that will come up again and again is the impact of collaboration. We specialize in helping people lead themselves, lead others, and lead systems, but we also understand that at every stage making connections that are bigger than ourselves are at the heart of moving forward. There’s unquestionably the thrill of a solo, but that thrill is also amplified in the context and power of a full symphony.   

Why is that? Many readers may be familiar with the Harvard Study of Adult Development, or the TED talk from current director Robert Waldinger and the recent book on its findings: The Good Life: Lessons from the World's Longest Scientific Study of Happiness. This study, which began in 1938, is one of the longest-running studies on human happiness and life satisfaction. It began with a group of 268 young men who were all sophomores at Harvard University, famously including 19-year-old John F. Kennedy. It eventually expanded to include a second study with a group of young men from inner-city Boston neighborhoods, and later, included children and spouses of original participants. Through decades of ongoing research on the participants’ health and general life trajectories that’s included studying medical records, periodical questionnaires, and in-person interviews, one of the most striking revelations has been the paramount importance of relationships throughout peoples’ lives.  

The Harvard study has found that people who are more socially connected to family, friends, and community are happier, healthier, and live longer than those who are less connected. It's not the number of friends you have, but the quality of your close relationships that matters; and deep, meaningful relationships are crucial for overall well-being. Good relationships protect people from life’s discontents, and protect not only our bodies but also our brains, delaying both mental and physical decline. They are better predictors of long and happy lives than social class, IQ, or even genes. On the flip side, researchers found experiencing loneliness can be as detrimental to your health as smoking or alcoholism. People who are isolated are less happy, their health declines earlier in midlife, their brain functioning declines sooner, and they live shorter lives.  

Once we understand the profound impact relationships and social connections have on individual well-being, we can learn how to nurture them throughout our lives. That brings us right back to the power of collaboration. Collaboration in any setting—at home, at work, or within a community or social movement—provides opportunities to build meaningful relationships. Working together towards common goals helps people establish trust, respect, and camaraderie, and helps individuals develop resilience and adaptability. Facing challenges as a team allows for diverse perspectives and solutions and makes it easier to navigate obstacles and changes. Creating environments that nurture strong, supportive relationships matters in every part of our lives to help people and ideas thrive. It’s often one of the key elements that turns a good intention into a symphonic strategy.

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Post by: Symphonic Strategies

“It seems to me that I’ve often been in places where if you wanted to make life better for yourself, you had to work to make life better for everybody.”
--Dr. June Jackson Christmas
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Not everyone knows Dr. June Jackson Christmas’s name, but fellow leaders in her field are fully aware of how her contributions made other peoples’ lives better. Dr. Christmas, who passed away on New Year’s Eve at age 99, was a pioneering Black woman psychiatrist and one of the first scholars and practitioners to address the impact of social and economic factors on mental health


She made history early in life as one of the first three students who identified as Black to graduate from Vassar College, where she was in the class of 1945-4. (The few Black students who attended Vassar years earlier had kept their racial identities hidden and “passed” as white while on campus.) After college, like her fellow trailblazing Black classmate Beatrix McCleary Hamburg, Dr. Christmas chose to go to medical school to study psychiatry. Dr. Hamburg became the first Black woman graduate of the Yale School of Medicine and an expert in child psychiatry. Dr. Christmas, who was one of just seven women in her class at Boston University’s School of Medicine, said she originally hoped studying psychiatry might help her teach people not to be racist. It did help her address race and class as she fought to make sure vulnerable populations had better access to care.


Dr. Christmas was a clinical professor of psychiatry at Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons, a professor of behavioral science at the City University of New York School of Medicine, a resident professor of mental health policy at the Heller Graduate School of Social Welfare of Brandeis University, the first Black woman president of the American Public Health Association, and an appointed leader who shaped New York City’s mental health care policy. As the New York Times said, Dr. Christmas “broke barriers as a Black woman by heading New York City’s Department of Mental Health and Retardation Services under three mayors . . . As a city commissioner, as chief of rehabilitation services at Harlem Hospital Center, and in her role overseeing the transition of the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare to a Democratic administration for President-elect Jimmy Carter, Dr. Christmas ardently advanced her professional agenda.” 


The Times continued: “Her priorities included improving mental health services for older people, helping people cope with alcoholism, and assisting children ensnared in the bureaucracies of foster care and the legal system. She also sought to ease the transition of patients from being warehoused in state mental hospitals to living independently . . . In 1964 she founded Harlem Rehabilitation Center, a Harlem Hospital program, which gained a national reputation for providing vocational training and psychiatric help to psychiatric hospital patients who had returned to their communities after being discharged.” This became a model for patient care. 


All of this gives a sense of not just what made Dr. Christmas a trailblazing leader, but how she displayed the characteristics of a symphonic leader. Throughout her life she was used to seeing the impossible: possessing a mindset that is free from the constraints imposed by the current reality, even a 13-year-old growing up in Boston who organized a spontaneous sit-in to try to integrate a roller-skating rink in neighboring Cambridge. She brought that mindset to each new role where she seized the opportunity to make advances in patient care. When asked in an interview how she motivated people, Dr. Christmas answered: “Let people know that you are on their side. That you are behind them and you are supportive. I do care that a patient or staff person is able to stand up for himself or herself. When we motivate others we just don’t look at a person. We look at a person and at their environment.” This perspective shows several of the principles of symphonic leadership, and is an example of playing from the soul: the ability to shape situations in ways that align collective action with the protection and advancement of self-interest.


Eric Wilson, the co-chair of Vassar’s African American Alumnae/i organization, gave one more clue about Dr. Christmas’s leadership style with this description: “Dr. Christmas was as regular as they came. Humble, personable, so totally lacking in pretension as to be considered old-school cool, and beyond brilliant.” This hints at a third characteristic of symphonic leaders, moving the crowd: a depth of social grace where social interactions leave people wanting more.

At Symphonic Strategies, we’re always on the lookout for new examples of symphonic leaders to study and share with others. Women’s History Month is a wonderful opportunity to highlight and celebrate great women leaders, but be sure you’re aware of the great leaders around you every day.

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Post by: Symphonic Strategies
Jun 3

The Power of Collaboration