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Shoshin — Innocent Mind

Tom McCallum
2 min readSep 12, 2020

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“Shoshin” is a Zen Buddhist term roughly translating as “Beginner’s Mind” or “Innocent Mind”.

This Saturday morning I am musing on the power of Shoshin

I was recently on a mentoring call and the mentee is an accomplished actor looking to grown and learn in a particular business space. At one point I asked them, from their experience as an actor, what was key for them to be at their best. They answered: “to have an innocent mind”

This made me think of the term “Shoshin”, a Zen Buddhist term roughly translating as “Beginner’s Mind”. I wrote a piece on this well over 2.5 years ago around some thoughts in that moment for me, sharing it again here.

Whether we call it Shoshin, innocent mind, beginner’s mind, to me one essential part of this is to be present and allow “flow”.

On a personal level, I am at the moment introspecting on a strength of mine that is also a gap, a lifelong conflict, to be honest, something to which applying the concept of Shoshin is an answer.

My problem is that I have a mind that can work really fast, calculating many permutations and arriving at future solutions to problems.

Yes, this is a real gift in some spaces, but sometimes not. Sometimes I leap ahead to the future at a speed that can frustrate, overwhelm or even “piss off”…

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Tom McCallum
Tom McCallum

Written by Tom McCallum

Sounding Board for Visionary Leaders ready to make a Massive Impact. Daily posts here, or https://tommccallum.com/newsletter-sign-up/

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