Read The Lost Art of Listening Online
Authors: Michael P. Nichols
Doreen asked her father out to lunch so the two of them would have
a chance to talk a little more personally than they did when her mother
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THE REAL REASONS PEOPLE DON’T LISTEN
was around. But when they sat down at the restaurant, he started in on
his usual diatribe against the bureaucracy. His bosses were “morons,” and
none of his coworkers cared about anything but “putting in their time
until retirement.”
Doreen had heard it all before. She nodded and looked interested and
thought about her upcoming sales conference. Once or twice she started to
interrupt, but something about the way her father spoke with more feeling
than usual made her heart move. She stopped thinking about the sales con-
ference and started listening to what he was saying. As she did, she began
to hear the hurt and disappointment underneath his carping. Suddenly she
was filled with sadness at her father’s isolation. His unhappiness had less
to do with his frustrations at work than that his constant complaining had
made other people in the family stop listening to him. Doreen’s annoyance
gave way to a powerful feeling of sympathy and connection with her father.
For the first time, she understood how lonely he was. Later, when she said
so, her father’s eyes filled with tears and he thanked her for listening.
Sometimes we’re so touched by what people say that listening just
happens. When your child bursts into the house and says “Guess what
happened!” you don’t have to work at listening.
My son was sick and stayed home yesterday, and when I called at
lunchtime to ask him how he was feeling, I didn’t have to make any effort
to suspend my interests to tune in to his. Nor would anyone else have
had to in my place. I was interested in his feelings, I intended to listen to
him, and I did. We all do this dozens of times each day, at least for a few
minutes.
Often, however, it’s not that easy. Much of the time listening takes
work.
When I came home after work, my son was lying on the couch watch-
ing TV. Again I asked how he was feeling, but this time it wasn’t quite as
easy for me to listen. As usual, he wasn’t wearing a shirt or socks, and I had
to suppress the urge to nag him about that. He was watching two brainless
cartoon teenagers rating videos in which everything was either “cool” or
“it sucks,” and I had to make an effort to ignore that. I had things on my
mind that I wanted to talk about, and I wanted to read the mail before it
was time for dinner. None of these considerations was terribly pressing or
unusual. It took only a little effort to suppress them long enough to listen
to my son for a little while. Had he needed to talk for more than a few min-
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utes, however, I would have had to make a more active effort to suspend
these other agendas—or I would not have been able to listen.
Of course suspending your needs in order to listen means more than
just allowing the other person time to talk. It doesn’t mean just letting a
certain amount of time elapse while that person has his say, only to leap in
with your own agenda when he’s finished.
We’re not fooled by the feigned attentiveness of the restless narcissist,
who may allow us a few minutes of airtime but is only waiting to take over
the stage. On the other hand, when we open up to someone we expect to
be interested and that person listens for a moment but then changes the
subject to himself, we feel betrayed. It’s like a slap in the face; we feel as
though he didn’t care about what we said.
Elena was worried about going back to get her master’s degree after
being out of school for six years. She’d been wanting to do this for a long
time, and her friend David, who already had his degree, had encouraged
her warmly. When she told him that she was concerned about doing the
work, David was so enthusiastic about her finally having taken the big
step that he jumped in to say how great it was that she was doing this for
herself and that she’d gotten into such a good program. Elena got quiet and
changed the subject. David’s encouragement hadn’t been very encourag-
ing. Elena was trying to tell him that she was worried, and his saying how
great it all was made her feel misunderstood. Ironically, David’s expression
of confidence in Elena felt like pressure, one more thing to live up to.
Like David, most people think they’re better listeners than they really
are. At best they allow the other person to state his case, and then they make
their own interpretation of what the other person said. At worst they’re pre-
paring their own argument while the other person is still talking.
David thought he was listening but wasn’t able to suspend his need to
have Elena not worry or for himself to be seen as supportive long enough
to hear her out. A lot of us have difficulty listening when it means having
to sit still and share someone’s uneasiness or uncertainty. We have to say
something to make the anxiety go away.
To listen well, you have to read the needs of the speaker and respond
to the context.
For example, when parents ask, “What did you do in school today?”
children often say, “Nothing.” What follows is an exchange of questions
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THE REAL REASONS PEOPLE DON’T LISTEN
and monosyllabic answers. The parent wants to hear what happened in
school but doesn’t listen to what the child is saying. The child is saying
something like “Nothing interesting enough for me to want to talk about
right now. I just want to be left alone.”
A child at school is exposed all day. Other kids look at you and pass
judgment on what you’re wearing, who you’re with, what you say, how your
hair is fixed, and just about anything you might do. Teachers watch to see
if you did your homework and if you’re paying attention and to make sure
you’re not making noise in the halls or generally having any fun. After being
the subject of such scrutiny all day, most kids want nothing more than to be
left alone. Their “nothing” isn’t coy or withholding; it’s self- protective.
The parents’ side of this conversation isn’t hard to understand either.
They’re curious about what goes on in their children’s lives. They want to
know if everything is okay. They want to know if their children are doing
what they should be doing. They don’t want to be shut out.
Sometimes kids say “nothing” but really do have something to say.
Maybe you have to show them that you’re really interested to convince
them to open up. Asking them about their day and really being prepared
to listen shows interest. Honoring their right to respond the way they want
shows respect as well as interest— interest in them and respect for their
feelings. Children who sense that their parents are interested in hearing
what they have to say—as opposed to interrogating or prying—will open
up when they’re ready.
“What’s Up?”
Questions that show awareness of the other person’s interests and con-
cerns may help reticent people open up.
Effective Questions
Ineffective Questions*
How are you coming with that
How’s everything?
project you’ve been working on?
What’s been happening with your
How was your day?
headaches lately?
How is your son doing in soccer?
What’s new?
*Note that most ineffective conversational gambits can be answered with yes, no, or nothing.
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If it’s difficult to suspend the self with our children, imagine how much
more difficult it is with another adult, whom we don’t expect to have to
indulge in any way— especially when we have our own problems.
Sometimes we fall into the habit of listening without effort because
we put so much effort into other things. When we work until we’re spent,
we become preoccupied with our own worries and careless of concern for
others. It’s especially hard to listen when you feel that
you
haven’t gotten
the attention you need. Here’s an example:
A woman who’s having a bad day at the office wishes she could be at
home with her five-year-old. She’s envious of her college professor husband
who, because it’s summer, is at home all day with the boy. When she gets
home, instead of complaining about her day, she asks how her husband’s day
went. He complains about the burden of having to amuse a five-year-old
and the difficulty of figuring out what to do with all the unstructured time.
She listens impatiently for a minute or two and then says, “Why are you
complaining? You’re lucky to have all this time off. Think of all the things
you could do!” Her husband is hurt—first she asks him how his day went,
then she criticizes him for telling her—and the woman herself is resentful.
The woman in this example wasn’t able to listen to her husband because
she wasn’t able to suspend her own feelings long enough to be receptive to
his. After talking about this episode, the woman concluded that she needed
to try harder to overcome or contain the stress of her work. (Perhaps it
would be more reasonable for her to realize that when she comes home after
a bad day she may need to talk about it before she’s ready to listen.)
A good listener may need to set aside his or her own needs
to tune in to the other person’s, but completely selfless
people don’t make good listeners. You have to get listened
to yourself to free you up to be receptive.
“But I
Am
Listening!”
The selflessness of genuine listening is hard to sustain, and so in a number
of ways we fool ourselves into thinking we’re listening when in fact we
aren’t.
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THE REAL REASONS PEOPLE DON’T LISTEN
“That Reminds Me of the Time . . . ”
(Translation: “I can top that.”)
When friends sit around having a casual conversation, they’ll get on a par-
ticular subject and take turns telling their own stories. Carol will describe
how her dachshund won’t do his business outside in the winter because
the minute he feels the icy snow on his paws he clickety- clicks back to the
door and whines to be let in. Then Murray will tell about the time his Rus-
sian wolfhound lay at death’s door for two days, until they found a small
burr in his long silky fur, and when they removed it, Sasha suddenly made
a miraculous recovery. Then I’ll tell something fascinating (to me, at least)
about my cat Ralphie’s latest adventure.
In this kind of friendly exchange it’s okay just to take turns. The per-
son telling a casual anecdote doesn’t need an elaborate response. However,
there are times when someone has something important to say and doesn’t
want to hear your story until she’s had a chance to finish hers—and get
some acknowledgment. She needs a little time and attention. The woman
who’s just had her car towed away doesn’t want to be interrupted to hear
about the time that happened to you three years ago.
Interrupting someone to tell a similar story is a common example
of how listeners don’t restrain themselves. Sometimes this is annoyingly
obvious, as when people draw attention to themselves by cutting in to
say, “That reminds me of the time . . . ” Most of us don’t do that when it’s
obvious that someone really needs to talk. If someone needs to talk, we lis-
ten. At times, however, the speaker’s need for attention isn’t obvious, and
instead of devoting ourselves to receptive listening, we respond from our
own needs. A friend starts to tell us about an accident and, in an attempt
to show empathy, we interrupt to tell her about ours—which, after all, was
more upsetting to us, even though it happened six months ago.
“Me Too.”
“I hardly slept at all last night.”
“Me, too! I was up and down all night.”
When people tell stories, it’s natural to be reminded of your own
experience. Who do you know who frequently says “me too” when you’re
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telling a story? When and how might such a response come across as
empathy for you and make you feel understood? When does it feel like the
spotlight has shifted away from you and onto the other person?
Why do people do that? Why do we interrupt to tell our own stories?
Most conversation is interactive. We’re engaged, and much of what people
say to us triggers something in our own experience. If I tell you something
annoying that my father does, you’re likely to think of something annoy-
ing your father does.1 Or if I tell you about the time I fell in love for the
first time, you’re likely to remember your first love. Sharing these stories
may feel like an effort to establish common ground. But listening to people
means hearing them out—giving them sufficient time to say what’s on
their mind and taking sufficient interest to follow and acknowledge their
experience.
“Oh, How Awful!” (Translation: “You poor, helpless thing.
What are we going to do?”)