Read The Lost Art of Listening Online
Authors: Michael P. Nichols
work, or do you not like having to show it to me?”
Sustaining Empathy as Children Grow
Thinking about sad-faced children, it’s hard not to be touched. You want
to put your arms around those kids and love them. You know how they
feel. But here’s where it’s possible to get confused. Empathy is generous,
and so it’s easy to slide into thinking of it as just another way of saying lov-
ing kindness. Empathy is loving, but it doesn’t mean being affectionate or
supportive or helpful or a lot of other nice things. Some parents are loving,
but the love they express is so suffocating that it smothers their children’s
initiative and is anything but empathic.
It’s easier to listen to children’s wants
when parents are firm with their wills.
3Cherie L. Bayer and Donald J. Cegala, “Trait Verbal Aggressiveness and Argumentative-
ness: Relations with Parenting Style,”
Western Journal of Communication
, 1992,
56
, 301–
310.
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Parents who allow the boundary between generations to erode become
not grownups-in- charge but peers and playmates, without the authority to
enforce boundaries or the credibility to comfort and protect. “No” is less
palatable than “yes,” and so it’s often served with a lot of verbal sauce, the
way some people try to get kids to eat vegetables by smothering them in
butter and salt (the vegetables). These parents won’t magically take charge
if someone teaches them to use gold stars and time-out chairs. Setting
limits and enforcing rules— beginning when children are small— follows
naturally from maintaining a clear boundary between the generations. It
also permits and facilitates empathy.
When children are little, the greatest impediment to empathy is a
parent’s not being in charge. When children get a little older, the hardest
part of empathy is letting them be themselves. Most parents can empathize
with children when they’re little. They’re comfortable with closeness. But
sustaining empathy means allowing children to differentiate, to have their
own wishes, their own interests, their own feelings. Children aren’t merely
cute or headstrong; they’re people, and they yearn, like you and me, to be
taken seriously.
Perhaps the most important shift a parent can make is to move from
wanting their children to be successful to being pleased with them, right
now, loving them, enjoying them, and accepting that they are who they
are. They are separate from us; they are themselves. Parents can begin to
really hear their children only when they set aside thinking of them as
unfinished products, clay for the parents to mold. None of this is meant
to say that we shouldn’t limit our children’s behavior—for our own con-
venience as well as for their own good. But once we accept that they are
who they are, for better or worse, we can worry less about them, relax our
attempts to control and reform and manipulate and improve them, and
concentrate on listening to them.
Listening to Teenagers
One reason parenting remains an amateur sport is that as soon as you get
the hang of it, the children get a little older and throw you a whole new
set of curves. Wise parents learn to shift their style of parenting to accom-
modate to their children’s development.
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LISTENING IN CONTEXT
Marlene could hardly believe that her little boy was fifteen. It didn’t
seem that long ago that Dylan had followed her around the house wanting
to do everything with her. Now he was a gangly adolescent who wanted
nothing to do with her. Almost overnight, it seemed, her little boy had
shot up, sprouted hair on his face, and developed an attitude.
Dylan still occasionally tolerated his mother’s company, but even
then he could be hard to talk to. One minute they’d be chatting amiably,
and the next thing you knew Dylan would lapse into gloomy silence.
Dylan didn’t argue with his parents openly, the way many teenagers
did, but he was getting harder to talk to. Half the time all he seemed to do
was grunt.
Adolescence is a famously difficult time for the family. Most teenagers
go through a period of rebelliousness, defining themselves as independent
through opposition to their parents. Some fight openly with their parents;
others, like Dylan, go underground.
If we look at the family as a system in transformation, we can see
teenagers in the vanguard for change. In pushing for autonomy they want
to loosen the ties that hold them back and redefine their relationship
with their parents. Conflict is inevitable because, while parents want to
slow the transition (“I’m still your father”), teenagers want to speed it up
(“Don’t you trust me?”).
Early signs of defiance begin at age twelve or thirteen. Preadolescents
begin to argue about everything—baggy pants, short skirts, tattoos, eat-
ing habits, chores, messy rooms, homework, cell phones, computer time,
television, R-rated movies, parties. It’s tempting to say that the outcome of
these struggles depends on the quality of communication between parents
and children. And while to a certain extent that’s true, the underlying
issue is attitudinal.
The problem isn’t just curfews or clothes; the real problem is that
teenagers are challenging the rules that govern family relationships. They
no longer want to be treated like children. They want to be treated like
people.
As parents, we tend to see things through the prism of our own expe-
rience. We weren’t as advantaged as today’s teens. We didn’t have cell
phones or computers. Our parents didn’t spend the kind of money on us
that we spend on our kids. Today’s teenagers have it easy. All they have to
Listening to Children and Teenagers
265
do is stand by while their bodies, raging with hormones, shoot up, change
shape, and sprout hair in the most unlikely places. Well, not exactly stand
by—just finish high school, figure out what they want to do with the rest
of their lives, get good grades, do volunteer work, fall in love and have
their hearts broken, make friends, lose friends, and transform themselves
from the children they were to the adults they want to be. How hard can
that be?
Adolescence is almost inevitably a difficult passage for the whole fam-
ily, but it needn’t be as antagonistic as we’ve come to expect. It can be an
enjoyable, even exciting, time for everyone in the family. Teenagers bring
new styles, new attitudes, and new information into the family. They keep
their parents up to date and on their toes. Although some parents get
defensive and resist their children’s changing status, others welcome the
breath of fresh ideas.
Holding On and Letting Go
Parents can err in either of two directions: by letting their children go too
early and too easily, thus depriving them of support and guidance; or by
holding on too tight, too long, and thus becoming a force against which
to rebel. Flexible boundaries give teenagers room to explore but keep lines
of communication open. What’s the secret of finding the right balance?
Listening works wonders.
But it’s not just listening as a passive taking in. It’s making an active
effort to tune in and hear what your teenager is saying. It’s connecting.
“My Kids Never Talk to Me Anymore.”
“How was school today?”
“Fine.”
“What are you doing?”
“Nothing.”
One of the hardest things about being a parent of teenagers is that
they start to shut you out. Beginning at about age eleven some kids begin
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LISTENING IN CONTEXT
to slip away from their parents, retreating more and more into their own
worlds. By fourteen most teenagers are a mystery to their parents.
Teenagers don’t talk to their parents because they don’t expect to get
listened to. Would you open up to someone if you anticipated criticism,
interrogation, and advice giving?
Don’t Pry
The quickest way to get shut out is to ask prying questions. Spend time
with your kids, but be patient; wait for the oyster to open.
Adolescence is a time of exquisite sensitivity to criticism because it’s
not just an emerging self but a changing self that is vulnerable to accep-
tance or rejection. Exposed and trapped in their own bodies, preoccupied
and troubled about sex, popularity, achievement, success, self- indulgence,
and self- denial, teenagers are on display all day at school and they feel
under terrific scrutiny. No wonder they’re sensitive to what their parents
say.
Whether or not children open up to their parents
depends on the reception they expect.
Teenagers won’t open up to their parents if they expect their feelings
to be disavowed.
“It can’t be that bad.”
“You’re making too much out of it.”
“Nobody is that mean.”
“You must have done something to make him respond that way.”
It isn’t just words that convey this lack of acceptance; it can be chang-
ing the subject, rolling your eyes, or ignoring your teenager’s feelings alto-
gether.
What do teenagers do when they stay out late? Most parents would
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267
love to know. But when they ask too many questions, they get few answers,
because kids don’t like to be cross- examined.
“What did you do?”
“Who was there?”
“Why did you do that?”
“What were you doing there in the first place?”
These same parents may complain that their teenagers don’t share
with them what’s going on with their friends or at school.
“Did you have fun today?”
“Why do you stay in your room?”
“Why aren’t you going to the dance?”
“Do any of your friends take drugs?”
“What’s wrong with asking questions?” you ask. Nothing. It’s not so
much the questions that turn teenagers off; it’s that parents ask their chil-
dren to reveal their feelings but don’t reveal any of their own. This feels
like an interrogation, rather than a mutual exchange.
What Happens When Your Kids Talk to You?
Did that question make you think about what your kids do in conversation
with you? How about what you do?
Do you give them your full attention? Do you turn off the TV or com-
puter? Do you put down the paper? Do you make eye contact?
If you give your children half of your attention, what are you telling
them they’re worth to you?
Oh, you do give your kids your full attention? In fact, you’re dying to
get them to talk to you? But do you approach them with an open, recep-
tive attitude? Are you prepared to hear what’s on their minds, or do you
pressure them to talk about what’s on your mind?
Another form of teenage withholding is “silent arguing.”
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LISTENING IN CONTEXT
Todd walked into the living room where his son Daniel was sprawled
on the couch watching TV. “Danny,” he said, “tomorrow is garbage day.
Will you please take out the garbage before you go to bed?”
“Uh-huh,” Daniel replied.
The following evening when Todd came home from work, he was
annoyed to see the garbage bag still sitting in the kitchen where he’d left
it the night before. He was annoyed, not only because the garbage hadn’t
been taken out, but also because Daniel had broken yet another agreement
with him.
As should be obvious, Todd didn’t really have an agreement with his
son. He asked Daniel to do something while he was watching TV, and
Daniel mumbled whatever it would take to get his father to leave him
alone. Daniel probably didn’t intend
not
to take out the garbage, but he
never really made a conscious commitment to do so.
Although some teenagers don’t argue openly with their parents, they
don’t exactly do what they’re asked, either. They agree only to avoid being
hassled. Their “okay” doesn’t mean “Okay, I’ll do it” as much as “Okay, I
hear you, now leave me alone.”
Silent Arguing
You can recognize silent arguing in a pattern of a teenager’s not doing
what you expect of him or her and with a general avoidance of discus-
sion. When confronted, the silent arguer will say “I forgot” or “Okay, I’ll
do it later.”
When someone repeatedly fails to do what you expect, it’s a safe bet
that he or she doesn’t want to. That much may be obvious. But what may
be less obvious is that silent arguers often “forget” because they don’t
think something really needs to be done or they don’t think it’s fair that
they have to be the one to do it. One way to find out is to ask.
The reason for silent arguing is not believing that the other
person is open to your point of view.
Listening to Children and Teenagers
269
“It seems like I always have to remind you to cut the grass. Do you
resent having to do it?”
“Do you think it isn’t fair that I want you to make your bed in the