The Yin and Yang of Court Reporters – What Do You Do Outside the Record?

Kevin O’Leary recently wrote something that struck me:

“When I hire top talent, I don’t just look at credentials. I want to know what else you do outside the office. Do you still dance, play guitar, paint, or ride motorcycles? Those eclectic passions matter. The best performers I’ve ever hired, whether CEOs, CFOs, or engineers, always have a Yin and Yang. They balance artistic pursuits with the binary discipline of business.”

It made me immediately think of court reporters — some of the most high-functioning, detail-driven, yet creatively balanced professionals I’ve ever met.

Over the years, I’ve seen countless posts showing the other side of reporters:
🎭 Singing in choirs
🎨 Painting or crafting
🏇 Riding horses
🎹 Playing piano
💃 Dancing, acting, or performing
🚴 Competing in triathlons
✈️ Traveling the world
🐾 Volunteering at rescues or shelters

These are not “hobbies” — they’re evidence of the same neural wiring that makes stenographers so extraordinary at our jobs: focus, rhythm, timing, discipline, and heart.

So let’s celebrate that.

💬 What do you do outside of reporting that keeps you balanced, creative, or inspired?
Share photos, stories, or even the weirdest “other life” you’ve lived beyond the transcript. Let’s remind the world that behind every page of testimony is a human being with incredible range.

Published by stenoimperium

We exist to facilitate the fortifying of the Stenography profession and ensure its survival for the next hundred years! As court reporters, we've handed the relationship role with our customers, or attorneys, over to the agencies and their sales reps.  This has done a lot of damage to our industry.  It has taken away our ability to have those relationships, the ability to be humanized and valued.  We've become a replaceable commodity. Merely saying we are the “Gold Standard” tells them that we’re the best, but there are alternatives.  Who we are though, is much, much more powerful than that!  We are the Responsible Charge.  “Responsible Charge” means responsibility for the direction, control, supervision, and possession of stenographic & transcription work, as the case may be, to assure that the work product has been critically examined and evaluated for compliance with appropriate professional standards by a licensee in the profession, and by sealing and signing the documents, the professional stenographer accepts responsibility for the stenographic or transcription work, respectively, represented by the documents and that applicable stenographic and professional standards have been met.  This designation exists in other professions, such as engineering, land surveying, public water works, landscape architects, land surveyors, fire preventionists, geologists, architects, and more.  In the case of professional engineers, the engineering association adopted a Responsible Charge position statement that says, “A professional engineer is only considered to be in responsible charge of an engineering work if the professional engineer makes independent professional decisions regarding the engineering work without requiring instruction or approval from another authority and maintains control over those decisions by the professional engineer’s physical presence at the location where the engineering work is performed or by electronic communication with the individual executing the engineering work.” If we were to adopt a Responsible Charge position statement for our industry, we could start with a draft that looks something like this: "A professional court reporter, or stenographer, is only considered to be in responsible charge of court reporting work if the professional court reporter makes independent professional decisions regarding the court reporting work without requiring instruction or approval from another authority and maintains control over those decisions by the professional court reporter’s physical presence at the location where the court reporting work is performed or by electronic communication with the individual executing the court reporting work.” Shared purpose The cornerstone of a strategic narrative is a shared purpose. This shared purpose is the outcome that you and your customer are working toward together. It’s more than a value proposition of what you deliver to them. Or a mission of what you do for the world. It’s the journey that you are on with them. By having a shared purpose, the relationship shifts from consumer to co-creator. In court reporting, our mission is “to bring justice to every litigant in the U.S.”  That purpose is shared by all involved in the litigation process – judges, attorneys, everyone.  Who we are is the Responsible Charge.  How we do that is by Protecting the Record.

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