Coaching matchmaking is now open: invest in community wellness by investing in yourself

By Tee @ 2023-07-17T11:17 (+39)

Table of Contents & Key Links

TLDR

Tldr: applications are now open for a free matchmaking service with a tightly integrated cohort of 9 coaches eager to serve effective altruist, rationalist and other nearby communities.

This matchmaking service is embedded within the Tee Barnett Coaching Training (TBCT) program, an iterative learning project that was constructed to enrich and hopefully reshape the landscape of well-being support.

In addition to meaningful personal and professional growth that our coaches hope to facilitate for you, we’re intending for your work with TBCT coaches to double as an indirect investment in human capital and wellness support infrastructure building.

Insight and learnings derived from TBCT coaching relationships will inform current and future iterations of the program. Over time, we hope to serve more people, help normalize receiving support, become better at training practitioners, cultivate higher-trust referral networks, and lay the foundations for directing or deploying skilled well-being support for those working in scalable good and existential risk reduction fields (e.g. AI safety). 

Disclaimer on intended audience

This post is for those who already feel that individualized well-being support, particularly coaching, could plausibly play an important role in their own personal and professional development; even more so for those who feel personal investments of this sort could meaningfully contribute to the long arc of their impact aspirations. 

Discussions around the general case for the effectiveness of coaching, including as it relates to the EA community, is outside the scope of this post. However, I’d love to engage in those conversations elsewhere, including future posts of mine, the relevant posts of others, and I’d even love to do a public panel discussion or AMA with folks who might be willing. You can message me directly at tee@teebarnett.com if any of that is interesting! The ‘Where all this could be headed’  and ‘Anticipated Questions & inquiries’ sections contextualize some of the rationale for the way this program is built and touch on relevant topics as they relate to the EA and rationalist communities. 

Coaching Matchmaking Overview

You can now apply for free matchmaking with a tightly integrated and supervised cohort of 9 coaches participating in the Tee Barnett Coaching Training (TBCT) program, each with different strengths and areas of focus

Upon filling out the brief application, you can get matched with up to three coaches for a free introductory call to see if there’s a fit. Should you find an encouraging fit with one or more of the coaches, and there’s mutual interest in working together, you’ll have a guaranteed ( 3 ) month period of working with your chosen coach at the below-market rate of $50 – $100/hr. USD.[1] 

Some indicators this matchmaking is a good fit for you: 

We are currently accepting applications on a rolling basis. You can apply here!


No need to read this whole post before applying. 


The TBCT program housing these participating coaches is a 6-month, multi-component training infrastructure designed to develop their practice as a skilled coach. You could think of it as a proto-accelerator or proto-incubator for solo practitioners. 

The infrastructure targets key developmental bottlenecks of coaches, including early client acquisition, real-world practice, training and oversight by multiple senior coaches, several forms of continuous feedback integration, co-created learning plans, and turnkey business architecture. (More about the TBCT program and how the program is structured to reshape the landscape of coaching accessibility and training.)

Where all of this could be headed

This section feels very personal to share because it has a great personal importance to me and the trajectory of my life’s work. Whether you’re supportive, curious, constructive, critical, confused, or anything else, please feel free to comment or reach out at tee@teebarnett.com

For those who’ve bought into dedicating (at least) their professional lives to reducing existential risk, the gravity of laboring to save humanity can have, unsurprisingly, distressing and harmful psychological fallout. These effects are likely underreported because they’re not amenable to standard forms of care (e.g. 'not worrying too much about the things you don’t feel optimistic about changing’), or other predictable reasons for not recognizing or surfacing emotional issues. 

And that’s saying nothing about traversing the distance between baseline functionality and what it means to get closer to something like thriving (which is where I personally believe true effectiveness and efficiency gains reside). 

Short of being able to cite results from a hypothetical version of this wonderfully useful mental health and productivity survey that could be circulated exclusively to those working within existential risk reduction fields, my eye tests seem to corroborate that mental health and wellness struggles in these spaces aren’t uncommon.

Posts from community forums addressing these topics mimic and rhyme with what clients preoccupied with existential dread have presented in coaching sessions with me, especially those who’ve worked directly within existential risk reduction fields. 

In particular, experiencing ambient levels of heightened anxiety, stress and overall emotional dysregulation as a result of being “justly terrif[ied]” due to existential worry, (un)wittingly instrumentalizing all aspects of their life due to the pull of the "AI Ragnarok memeplex" and/or  “a totalizing obligation to help,” struggling with or losing the ability to enjoy their lives. There’s a lot of desire to make sense of what implications their philosophical investigations ought to have on their lives. Many of these issues are held in place and exacerbated by the ideologies, priorities, and downstream emotional effects of pressurized work and social environments.[2] [3]

(If you’re someone for whom this immediately resonates, I’d like to highlight “Mental Health and the Alignment Problem: A Compilation of Resources”) 

Insofar as the case for coaching effectiveness seems plausible to the reader, so too would be the notion that individuals working on the frontlines of existential risk reduction could likely use some skilled support in their lives. 

Invoking the tl;dr section above, the TBCT program is an iterative learning project that will hopefully enrich and reshape the landscape of well-being support.

Scaling up and enhancing personalized support in the present day is our way of helping address much of this, but the near- and medium-term aims of TBCT are also meant to build a human capital and resource base that could be increasingly capable of being deployed directly toward existential risk reduction efforts.

In short, my aims are to a) popularize and normalize coaching and related mental health interventions, b) skill up more practitioners (including myself), c) become more skilled at training practitioners, and eventually d) cultivate a high-trust and value-aligned network of coaches, some of whom would be capable and interested in (re)deploying their efforts for individuals working on the frontlines of existential risk reduction. (e.g. the criticality of supporting certain individuals becomes abundantly clear due to a particularly alarming development or event.) 

TBCT plans to release data and analysis on the program using a ‘collage’ of quantitative and qualitative methodologies similar to Tee’s report on his experience coaching a dozen EA leaders

And finally, while the discussion about good governance in EA is outside the scope of this post, I think there’s good reason to believe that coaching and therapy can meaningfully contribute to personal moral development. 

At the very least, coaching can help individuals arrange better circumstances for encouraging and developing desired virtue. In several instances when working with EA leaders, takeaways from our sessions revolved around things like “spend more time harnessing your board’s [strategic] input,” “consult with board members about this tricky situation,” “take more seriously building out policies and procedures,” and even “make arrangements to invest more time and energy into good governance” for various farsighted reasons. I’m encouraged by good governance initiatives out there and sincerely hope that they are emphasizing various types of personalized support like mentorship, coaching and therapy.[4] [5]

Meet the Cohort

The ‘areas of focus’ subsections for each coach have not been standardized in order to preserve the voice of each coach within this section. Some coaches are also still actively developing their areas of focus within the TBCT program. 

Anna Weldon

Open Philanthropy Project

People Operations Manager 


 (Not currently accepting new clients) 

Areas of Focus: 

Brian Nuckols


 
 Areas of Focus: 

Here are some common themes clients and I address: 

Harri Besceli

Areas of Focus: 

Harry Taussig

Areas of Focus: 

Jana Meixnerová

Areas of Focus: 


 Milan Patel

Areas of Focus: 

I'm a multifaceted coach helping individuals focussed on doing scalable good. My areas of focus are:

Natalia Dashan

Areas of Focus: 


Pavitthra Pandurangan

Areas of Focus: 

I will help you …

Signe Savén

Coach & PhD student in philosophy at Lund University

Areas of focus: 

How can I apply? 

We are currently accepting applications on a rolling basis. You can apply here!

 

No need to read this whole post before applying. 

Anticipated questions and inquiries

About the matchmaking program

The basics

Philosophy and approaches

About TBCT and where all of this could be headed

  1. ^

    The exact rate within that range will vary as a matter of agreement between the supervised coach and client. Also, rates beyond the three-month introductory period will also vary as a matter of agreement between you and your chosen coach you’ve been working with. 

  2. ^
  3. ^

    https://archive.is/OyQSt

  4. ^

    https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/73mAv8m3PjsXzJ4Ad/update-on-project-on-reforms-at-ea-organizations

  5. ^

    https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/TT3gNbA534C7HNBCF/introducing-the-ea-good-governance-project