Read The Lost Art of Listening Online
Authors: Michael P. Nichols
What We Hear
One way to learn something about the forces that influence listening is to
hear the same story from two different sides.
Lucy was a special- education teacher who had a humiliating encoun-
ter with the principal of her school. When the principal needed to find
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How Hidden Assumptions Prejudice Listening
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space for a new reading instructor, she sent Lucy a memo saying that she
would have to move to a small room in the basement, previously used
for storage. Lucy prided herself on being flexible, but being banished to
the basement made her feel humiliated and that the principal had little
respect for the special needs of her children.
When Lucy called to discuss this unsatisfactory arrangement, the
principal made an appointment to see her that afternoon. But when Lucy
showed up at four o’clock, the principal had gone to another meeting and
left a note suggesting they get together later. Ten days went by before the
principal finally made time to talk to her. By that point Lucy had to make
an effort to control her anger to make the case, as calmly as possible, that
moving to the basement just wasn’t acceptable. Instead of listening, the
principal, who’d obviously made up her mind, got defensive. At one point,
when Lucy protested that the specially equipped classroom in which the
children now met had always been her room, the principal said archly,
“Oh, did you bring it from home?” Lucy left the meeting in tears.
As soon as she got home, Lucy called her sister, who since their moth-
er’s death was the only living member of her family. But when Lucy tried
to explain what had happened, Katrine kept interrupting with questions.
“What did you say that made that woman so defensive? You must have
said something to set her off like that.” Lucy couldn’t believe it. Instead
of being supportive, her sister was blaming
her
for the incident. It felt like
a slap in the face. “Just listen, Katrine, will you!” she pleaded. That shut
Katrine up for the moment, but Lucy could tell that her sister wasn’t sym-
pathetic and wasn’t really listening, so she said good-bye and hung up.
When Lucy told me about this incident two days later, she said that
her sister hadn’t been there for her when she’d needed her. It certainly
sounded that way. But by a strange twist of fate, I got to hear Katrine’s ver-
sion of the same event the following week.
According to Katrine, she’s had lifelong problems talking with her sis-
ter. “Lucy has always dominated our conversations. She loves to talk about
herself, but she hardly ever listens to anything I have to say. If I pause for
a minute, she immediately jumps in with some comment or criticism.” But
what bothered Katrine most was that Lucy was always complaining. “She’s
always telling me about hassles with somebody—other teachers, neigh-
bors, supermarket clerks, even the nice old man in the Chinese take-out
place. And it’s always the other person’s fault. I used to try to listen—after
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THE REAL REASONS PEOPLE DON’T LISTEN
all, she is my sister. But as I’ve gotten older, I just don’t have time for
her negativism.” According to Katrine, Lucy was hard to listen to because
she’d used up her credit.
It’s not uncommon for speakers not to be heard because their cred-
ibility is low. A father’s credibility, for example, may be determined by
whether his wife and children think he’s tuned in to what’s going on in the
family or too preoccupied with his work to have any idea about what’s hap-
pening at home. If he’s had an affair or drinks too much—even though he
preaches virtuousness to the children—they may not respect him enough
to hear what he has to say. A parent’s status in the world also affects his or
her credibility. A father who is laid off and out of work may lose credibil-
ity. This may not be because his family is judgmental, but because people
who have lost self- respect in their own eyes often express themselves with
a bitter edge that makes them hard to listen to. Listening is always code-
termined.
The minute you pick up the phone and hear some people’s voices,
you’re on guard. They’re asking you how things are going, but you’re wait-
ing for the pitch. They call only when they want something. Even if you
want to be friends, the one-sided nature of these relationships wears thin
after a while. When you answer the phone and they say hello, they can
probably hear the enthusiasm drop out of your voice. Do they have any
idea why?
Credibility is also influenced by whether you’re viewed as being in an
appropriate position within a particular setting. A colleague who’s seen as
not really caring about what goes on at work may not be listened to even
when he has something worthwhile to say. A mother who talks to her ado-
lescent children as though they were still six years old may be experienced
as out of touch and therefore incapable of having legitimate concerns.
A lot of grandparents don’t get heard when they give advice about
childrearing. Their mistake isn’t necessarily being intrusive but rather
being out of touch with their children’s insecurity about being parents.
The grandparents aren’t heard because their children perceive their advice
as undermining their own uncertain authority. In this case, the grandpar-
ents’ mistake may be treating their children as though they were
more
grown up, in charge and confident, than they feel.
A speaker’s credibility is also affected by whether or not his or her
messages are clear and pertinent. If your father-in-law muddles his mes-
How Hidden Assumptions Prejudice Listening
99
sages with malapropisms and tangential references, you may try to under-
stand him as part of building a relationship with your spouse’s family. But
if you have to work too hard at it, after a while you may give up. If your
father always changes the subject to talk about himself, you may get out
of the habit of listening. People who abuse the privilege of our listening
by going on and on or flitting from one subject to another may create the
expectation that listening to them is too much work, so why bother?
When the speaker has lost credibility but the relationship has a good
track record, you might pay attention even though you may not really
hear. You might give the aunt who’s always been nice to you the courtesy
of your attention even though you don’t respect her enough to really listen
to what she’s saying. But if there is relentless repetition of a message—any
message—you’re likely to withdraw even the courtesy of attention, replac-
ing it with annoyance or distance.
If a friend can’t stop talking about her ex- boyfriend, you may get tired
of hearing it. And perhaps frustrated that she won’t let go. The same thing
happens if a friend going though a divorce can’t talk about anything but
what a bitch his ex is.
How Our Expectations Make Us Hypersensitive:
The Discoveries of Object Relations Theory
Our relationships to each other depend on our capacity to transcend imme-
diate experience by making a reproduction of it inside the mind, where we
can then manipulate the possibilities. A simple example of this is a baby
learning to tolerate his mother’s absence by remembering her presence and
relying on her return. This mental representation of experience can be the
source of adaptive flexibility or of rigid inflexibility that sets some people
at odds with the world around them.
From the start, our lives revolve around relations with others. The
residue of these relationships leaves internal images of self, other, and self-
in- relation-to- others. As adults we react not only to the actual other but
also to an internal other.
Object relations theory
focuses on this internal
other—the mental images we have of other people, built up from experi-
ence and expectation.1
1
Object relations
may seem a cold- blooded term for human interactions, but
objects
refer to 100
THE REAL REASONS PEOPLE DON’T LISTEN
The details of object relations theory are rich with particulars for
explaining our assumptions and emotional sensitivities, but the essence is
quite simple: We relate to people in the present on the basis of expecta-
tions from the past. (A man who emerges from puppyhood with a clear
picture of his father lording it over his mother may vow always to be kind
and considerate to his own wife—at all times unstinting in his criticism
and counsel.)
Contemporary relationships and earlier ones (encoded in the inner
world of objects) interact in circular fashion. Life circumstances maintain
internal expectations and are chosen because of them and interpreted in
light of them.
Alice sometimes felt overwhelmed by all the people in her life who
depended on her. She was the one responsible for taking care of her aging
parents, even though her brother lived a lot closer than she did. Her thir-
ty-year-old daughter called her three or four times a week to complain
about something or ask for advice. Several people at work were always
asking for her help on various things, even though she had her own proj-
ects to look after. What Alice forgot was that she liked doing things for
people. It made her feel good. She sought out opportunities to be helpful.
She grew up being rewarded for being the “good daughter” and was still
playing that role, including with the two people who taught it to her in
the first place.
Terry had a reasonably full life but no real friends. As a boy he had
friends but never got too close to any of them. He didn’t want to feel out of
control or that he’d lost any of his freedom to come and go as he pleased.
Beginning in college, he got more involved with what he was doing and
less involved with friends. He avoided small talk because he felt it was
taking him away from more important things. Slowly he got out of the
habit of socializing, and eventually when he realized that he missed having
friends in his life, most of the men he wanted to get close to were too busy
with their jobs and families to have much time for friendship.
mental images of other people that are the object of our actions, not to the people them-
selves.
How Hidden Assumptions Prejudice Listening
101
The past is alive in memory—and it runs our lives
more than we know.
To understand the depth of some people’s hypersensitivity to making
mistakes, we might turn to Melanie Klein’s notion of the
depressive position
,
the painful discovery that love and hurt can go together.2 To understand
other people’s rage at criticism, we might consider Ronald Fairbairn’s idea
that the neurotic’s ego is split into an
exciting ego
(leaving him longing for
total love) and a
rejecting ego
(leading him to expect rejection), so that
his relationships take on an “all good” or “all bad” quality and shift dra-
matically from one to the other.3 To explain why some people attack and
others withdraw when they get hurt, we might look to how their families
responded to their narcissistic need for attention. Some people get atten-
tion for being good; in their families anger and assertiveness are beyond
the pale. For others, who get attention for achievement, vulnerability and
weakness may be intolerable.
What’s common to these and other object- relations formulations is
the idea that the neurotic person encounters others not as an equal but
as a fearful child, intimidated not so much by the reality of other people
as by imagined negative responses. In this respect, we’re all a little neu-
rotic.
How We Learn to Overreact
Some of the expectations we bring to conversations are built up from the
history of our relationships with specific individuals. But some of what we
expect to hear is part of the deep structure of our personalities, the resi-
due of our earliest relationships. To understand listening and the dynamics
of relationship it’s necessary to consider not only what goes on between
people but also what goes on inside them.
2Melanie Klein, “Notes on Some Schizoid Mechanisms,”
International Journal of Psycho-
Analysis
, 1946,
27
, 99–110.
3W. Ronald D. Fairbairn,
An Object- Relations Theory of the Personality
(New York: Basic Books, 1952).
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THE REAL REASONS PEOPLE DON’T LISTEN
More than we like to realize, we continue to live
in the shadow of the families we grew up in.
The sometimes vast difference between words spoken and message
intended is nothing compared to the often vaster gulf between what is said
and what is heard. Whenever someone seems to be responding unreason-
ably, it might be useful to ask: What would make that response reasonable?
Once you start thinking this way—namely, that people act the way they