Mindful Work, David Gelles
Mindful Work, David Gelles
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Mindful Work
How Meditation is Changing Business from the Inside Out

Author: David Gelles

Narrator: Nick Podehl

Unabridged: 9 hr 8 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 03/10/2015


Synopsis

A New York Times reporter reveals what business leaders around the country are already discovering: meditation may be the key to fostering a happier, more productive workplace.For the past few years, mindfulness has begun to transform the American workplace. Many of our largest companies, such as General Mills, Ford, Target, and Google, have built extensive programs to foster mindful practices among their workers. Mindful Work is the first book to explain how all sorts of businesses and any kind of worker can benefit from meditation, yoga, and other mindful techniques. As a business reporter for the New York Times who has also practiced meditation for two decades, David Gelles is uniquely qualified to chart the growing nexus between these two realms. As he proves, mindfulness lowers stress, increases mental focus, and alleviates depression among workers. He also offers real-world examples of how mindfulness has benefited companies that have adopted it—from the millions of dollars Aetna has saved in health-care costs to the ways Patagonia has combined leadership in its market with a pervasively mindful outlook.Gelles's revelatory book picks up where bestsellers like Thrive and 10% Happier leave off, by detailing how mindfulness works in and for the companies that adopt it, revealing the profound impact mindfulness can have on the world of work. Mindful Work goes beyond other books on the subject by providing evidence for the practical benefits of mindfulness and showing readers how to become more mindful themselves.

About David Gelles

David Gelles is the “Corner Office” columnist and a business reporter for the New York Times. Since joining the Times in 2013, he has written about CEOs, finance, technology, media, and more. He was part of the team that covered the fallout from the crashes of two Boeing 737 Max jets, work that won the 2020 Gerald Loeb Award for Breaking News Reporting. A student of Buddhism and a meditator for more than twenty years, David is an authority on the intersection of mindfulness and the business world. His 2015 book, Mindful Work: How Meditation is Changing Business from the Inside Out, was published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. Before joining the Times, he was a reporter for the Financial Times.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Dan on January 01, 2015

fantastic, informative, exhausting-researched book about all of the ways in which some of the most interesting and effective people in our culture are using meditation on the job. full disclosure: the author, david gelles, is a friend. nonetheless, i think think the fact that he is a longtime medita......more

Goodreads review by Paul on January 11, 2021

This was a great read - highly recommend it. Insightful, interesting and well-written. Lots of useful tools (personal and professional) to take away and put into action.......more

Goodreads review by Rama on February 02, 2015

Meditating in the corporate boardroom The author defines "Mindfulness" as the ability to see what's going on our heads without getting into it. He defines mindfulness as means of being aware of our experiences, observing without judgment and responding from place of clarity, compassion rather than f......more

Goodreads review by Anna on September 28, 2017

Gelles' thorough analysis of workplaces implementing mindfulness shows us how close meditation practice and success are related. Mindfulness, compassion and living in the present are integral parts of a culture of a thriving company and "Mindful Work" shows us numerous examples to prove it.......more

Goodreads review by Kevin on August 28, 2018

Weird it may sound, due to my lack of concentration and daily changing taste I tend to jump reading one book to another while reading them half way through. To the books currently awaiting their turn to be finished up I committed another misconduct, by instinctively picking a new book I had little i......more