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Curious, Healing

Curious, Healing

Books about healing, business, and fun

  • About Sonia Connolly

leadership

“Hospicing Modernity” by Vanessa Machado de Oliveira

February 4, 2026 by Sonia Connolly Leave a Comment

book cover
Subtitle: Facing Humanity’s Wrongs and the Implications for Social Activism
Recommended to me by: Amy Bennett

This book is a brilliantly written educational tool, including full transparency about the techniques it is using to bring the reader new ideas in the face of very sophisticated defenses. The first few chapters earnestly present the risks of reading the rest of the book, and offer practices to remain grounded and centered while reading stories that question basic assumptions about our reality.

Vanessa Machado de Oliviera uses stories from her own life as a mixed-race person in South America who now works in academia, in addition to deep political analysis to describe the twists and tricks of modernity, the way it consumes us and alters our thinking so that it seems inevitable and unquestionable. She uses metaphors and exercises to encourage new ideas to take root.

One of the exercises is to imagine oneself as a bus with varied passengers, and to pay attention to who is driving, who is giving suggestions to the driver, and who is in the back of the bus, not directly affecting the choice of direction, but still present. She asks, where is modernity on your bus, and what does it have to say.

I thought about that as I biked to an errand, and at first modernity seemed very distant. Then I realized it is standing by the driver and talking constantly about what I’ve done wrong and how I need to be productive and earn enough to deserve to live, etc. etc.

Modernity is tricky and slippery and we’ve all been steeped in it, so even when we think we have renounced and defeated it, we are engaging in battles and black & white thinking that are part of it. Thus we want to honor it both outside and inside ourselves as it goes through its death throes and makes way for something new that is hopefully more nourishing and healthy for us all.

I got this book from the library, but I think I need to buy a copy. It is a book to sit with and revisit and go back to. Highly recommended

Author’s website including videos of the author discussing her work.

Available at bookshop.org.

Filed Under: nonfiction Tagged With: activism, anti-racism, feminism, leadership, memoir, politics, psychology, spirituality, survival story, trauma

“Resilient Management” by Lara Hogan

November 30, 2024 by Sonia Connolly Leave a Comment

book cover
Recommended to me by: Allison McMillan

Managers of engineering teams are often software engineers promoted to management without additional training, and without the realization that management is a new job requiring new skills. This is a compassionate and kind book with a lot of practical, actionable advice on how to be better manager of a software team.

It starts with a common description of the stages of a new Agile team:

  • Forming – everyone is politely getting to know each other
  • Storming – conflicts arise from people’s different ways of working and interacting
  • Norming – the team settles into functional ways of working together
  • Performing – the team is a cohesive whole, effectively moving forward and accomplishing their goals

In the section on getting to know team members, Lara Hogan emphasizes that everyone has different needs and preferences, and it works better to be curious than to assume everyone is the same. She offers this list of First 1:1 Questions to get to know each person.

It is important to be mindful of people’s core needs. Paloma Medina describes core needs as:

  • Belonging
  • Improvement/Progress
  • Choice
  • Equality/Fairness
  • Predictability
  • Significance

which spells BICEPS as a memory aid. More at: palomamedina.com/biceps

Managers have many jobs, from keeping the team’s work on track to coaching team members to helping resolve problems and conflicts. Managers can ask themselves what they are optimizing for, and communicate that, to help team members know what to expect and how best to work together.

With each team member, managers can mentor (give advice), coach (ask open questions), sponsor (give a team member opportunities) and give feedback (both positive and negative). Coaching is a skill worth developing to help people grow.

One way to structure feedback is: Observation of behavior + Impact of behavior + Request or Question = Specific, actionable feedback. Observations should be neutral and factual. Impact can relate to feelings, and should also be measurable and understandable by the feedback recipient. For example, emails that are too terse add much more time to the overall process of communicating.

Set clear expectations and assign roles for projects and decisions with RACI – who is Responsible, Accountable, Consulted, and Informed. This prevents committees where everyone is in on the discussions but no one person takes action.

Teams can have a Vision, Mission, Strategy, and Objectives to align toward accomplishing their goals.

Identify and document the team’s meetings, communication channels, and processes, to help new people who are joining, and to have a single point of reference.

Plan carefully for communications about difficult topics that impact the team, for example, reorgs or layoffs. Who needs to know when, what to say, etc.

Communication can have different tones or energies, which can be represented with colors.

  • Red – a bit of anger, frustration, edge, or urgency
  • Orange – cautious, hesitant, tiptoes around topics
  • Yellow – lighthearted, effervescent, cracks jokes
  • Green – in tune with others’ feelings, loving, high emotional intelligence
  • Blue – calm, cool, collected, steady
  • Purple – creative, flow, great at storytelling
  • Brown – adds (and lives in) nuance, complexity, or ambiguity
  • Black – blunt, unfeeling, no nuance, cut and dry

Listen for people’s motivations and connect messages about things you want them to do to things they care about.

Manage your own energy, and delegate more to team members, which helps them grow and lightens your load. Say no to things that aren’t the highest priorities. Develop a support network of other managers, by reaching out for conversations.

Highly recommended for new and existing managers, and also people who are managed. We can acquire new skills on both sides of the management relationship.

Available at bookshop.org.

Filed Under: nonfiction Tagged With: business, communication, leadership, software

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