HCBA Lawyer Magazine Vol. 29, No. 3 | Page 5

E D I T O R ’ S M E S S A G E E d C o m e y - L a w C l e r k t o U. S . B a n k r u p t c y Ju d g e M i c h a e l G. Wi l l i a m s o n Wishing You a Joyful New Year! “[J]oy is something that we can always hold onto.” “Had it. Lost it.” That was Klay Thompson, all-star shooting guard for the Golden State Warriors, talking to ESPN about his team’s quest for joy during a rare four- game losing streak. The Warriors, winners of three of the past four NBA championships, operate on four core values: the first is joy. When discussing the importance of joy, Kevin Durant, another Golden State Warrior all-star, mused about the distinction between joy and happiness: “I feel like a lot of people confuse joy and happiness. I think happiness is a feeling that is fleeting. It means you can go back and forth all the time. I feel like joy is something that you can stand on.” Until reading those comments, I always assumed happiness and joy were the same. But it turns out Durant is on to some - thing. According to psychologists, happi ness tends to be temporary, while joy tends to be longer lasting. More important, happiness tends to be based on external events. We are happy when things (jobs, relationships, etc.) go our way. Joy, however, is internal. And it exists even when things don’t go our way. Durant explained how joy has been crucial to the Warriors’ ability to grind their way through the ups and downs of an 82-game season year after year and why it was so important for them to find their joy: “[W]hen you’re enjoying what you do, you don’t mind the adversity, the tough times, the challenges. The little obstacles you got to climb to get to where JAN - FEB 2019 | HCBA LAWYER you want to go. I think joy is something that we can always hold onto.” Thompson was more to the point about how having joy can change your perspective on things:”It’s been a while since we’ve been on a losing streak like this, but at the end of the day it’s not the end of the world. We still play basketball for a living and make people happy, so it’s pretty easy to find joy in that.” All this got me to thinking that maybe I need to join the Warriors on this elusive quest for joy. As lawyers, it’s hard not to get caught up focusing on — and linking our happiness to — things like billable hours, col lections, books of business, outcomes of cases, etc. Although, for me, working for a judge lessens some of those external factors. With the internal peace that comes from having joy, it’s easier to say, to borrow from Klay Thompson: “At the end of the day, our hours, or collections, or book of business, or the outcome of a case is not the end of the world. As lawyers, we still get to make a living helping people. So it’s easy to find joy in that.” At the end of last school year, my oldest daughter came home and hung up a sign she had made at school. It read: “Be Joyful.” (She goes to a school run by Salesian Sisters, an order of nuns known for their cheerfulness and joy). We took the sign down to hang up our Christmas decorations. But you better believe it’s going back up January 1 as a reminder of the elusive quest to find joy. Here’s wishing you a joyful New Year! 3