Lawyers Who Learn with David Schnurman

Lawyers Who Learn

Exploring how lifelong learning empowers attorneys' growth. Tune in for inspiring journeys and insights to elevate your legal career!

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#70 Five Toxic Myths Trapping Lawyers—And How Greek Gods Break Them

Scott Mason spent 25 years building exactly the legal career everyone expected: Columbia Law School graduate, general counsel to the nation's largest domestic violence shelter provider, second-in-command of New York City's court system. When a near-death illness hit in 2023, it didn't introduce a new question. It just made the one he'd been avoiding impossible to ignore: had he become an attorney to meet everyone else's expectations except his own? By then, he'd already launched a transformational coaching practice in 2020, built on an unlikely foundation—Greek mythology.

In this episode of Lawyers Who Learn, host David Schnurman, CEO of Lawline, explores why Scott believes ancient Greeks understood something modern coaching ignores. While philosophers like Aristotle rejected mythical thinking, Scott argues they threw out the blueprint. The patterns that trapped Sisyphus in endless repetition, Persephone in darkness, and Prometheus in punishment aren't ancient history—they're operating in law firms today. Attorneys pushing the same rock uphill daily, partners fearing change will destroy them, associates repeating behaviors that stopped serving them years ago.

Scott introduces his Five Toxic Myths: tragic origins, social expectations, ritualistic patterns, doomsday thinking, and existential apathy. His solution—stepping into roles of Author, Hero, or Olympian—requires twenty sessions and "radical self-accountability." A remarkable moment arrives when Scott discovers David's son recently studied the exact childhood book that changed Scott's life and led him to identify with Helios, the sun god—proof, Scott suggests, that these archetypal patterns are more universal than we admit. His deliberately bold branding intentionally repels some while attracting his ideal client: the mid-career lawyer sensing greater possibilities but unable to identify the "mist" holding them back.

 

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