Read The Lost Art of Listening Online
Authors: Michael P. Nichols
forms personal and professional relationships (which it does) but can also
bring understanding across the gender gap, the racial divide, between rich
and poor, and even among nations. All that may be true, but if I’m going
to indulge in the unearned right to preach, maybe I should confine myself
to matters closer to home. After all, I’m a psychologist, not a philosopher.
Having read this far, you’ve probably been reminded of some things
you already knew but perhaps also come to see that listening is even more
important and difficult than people realize. The urge to be heard is so com-
pelling that even when we do listen, it’s usually not with the intent to
understand but to reply. And, as if that didn’t make listening hard enough,
at times of heat and conflict it takes a real effort to overcome, or at least
restrain, the reactive emotionalism that jolts us into anxiety and out of
sympathy with each other.
Few things can do as much to bring mutual understanding to your
relationships as responsive listening— hearing and acknowledging other
people’s thoughts and feelings before voicing your own. You can make
responsive listening a habit but, like any new habit, it takes practice.
One of my least favorite remarks has come from certain individuals
in therapy to improve their relationships. They’ve complained. I’ve lis-
tened sympathetically. Then I’ve suggested things they could do to start
giving and getting the understanding they say they long for. Then comes
The Comment: “Why does everything have to be so artificial? Why can’t
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305
we just talk to each other?” I hate that! They
were
talking, and it wasn’t
working.
It’s annoying when people say that it’s unnatural to hold their response
until they’ve acknowledged what the other person has to say, because this
protest seems so stubborn and self- defeating. But the thing that really
annoys me about this comment is that it’s true: good listening
doesn’t
come
naturally.
Listening is a skill, and like any skill it must be developed. But although
listening can be looked at this way—as a performance—it can also be looked
at another way, as a natural outgrowth of caring and concern for people.
* * *
you feel. Caring about others almost automatically impels you to act with
consideration for them. This consideration isn’t wholly unselfish, because
caring about someone means that your well-being is tied up with theirs.
When a bad thing happens to someone you love, something bad happens
to you as well. But
showing
that you care, suspending your own interests
and making yourself receptive, isn’t always easy.
Listening a little harder— extending what we do automatically, extend-
ing ourselves a little more—is one of the best ways we can be good to each
other. Attending a little harder to other people—enough to hear their feel-
ings, enough to consider their point of view—this takes a little effort.
Caring enough to listen doesn’t mean going around selflessly available
to everyone you encounter. Rather, it means being alert to those situations
in which someone you care about needs to be listened to.
* * *
to us. Conflict, habit, and the pressure of emotions makes us listen least
well where listening is most needed. As we move outside the family circle
to those we care about but don’t live with, we tend to be more open, more
receptive, and more flexible. It’s not—as we’re sometimes accused of —
that we care more about our friends than about our family but that these
relationships are less burdened with conflict and resentment.
You won’t get far with your efforts to listen better without running
into the problem of your own emotionality. Listening better requires not
only a greater openness to others but also a greater awareness of yourself.
Do you express yourself in a way that makes listeners anxious and defen-
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sive? If so, what can you do about it? (If the answer is nothing, then that’s
the improvement you can expect in the listening you get.) Under what cir-
cumstances do you become reactive and give advice or interrupt or make
jokes instead of listening?
* * *
us. Unfortunately, frustrations at home and a sense of powerlessness in the
wider world mean that we don’t always act with generosity and concern.
* * *
right to bitterness. This feeling of injured entitlement can be understood
as a product of insufficient emotional nourishment. People who are hungry
for attention are suffered, shunned, or shamed. Others let them know in
some way that their need to be heard is excessive. And where does that
leave them? Hungry for attention. And so the problem of listening, like all
human problems, is circular: inadequate appreciation makes us insecure in
ourselves and less open to others. The listening we don’t get is the listen-
ing we don’t pass on.
Our inability to get the attention we crave leaves us feeling power-
less—a feeling reinforced by living in a world marked by economic decline,
crime, pollution, and bureaucratic ineptitude. So it’s not surprising that
we’ve lost faith in our capacity to make a difference. Public disillusion
and private disappointment deplete and discourage us. We feel put upon
and let down, and so, naturally, we turn our resentment outward and our
sympathy inward.
When you feel beleaguered and insecure, it’s natural to think about
looking out for number one. Unfortunately, self- absorption is self- defeating.
Trapped in self- consciousness, we become polarized and resentful. Sadly,
anger and despair have fueled a decline in concern and a retreat to the
dead end of preoccupation with ourselves.
You can’t simply reverse the process of misunderstanding, but you can
realize that relationship problems are circular, and circular patterns can be
broken—if someone is willing to make the first move.
The great reward of making that move is that listening allows us to be
open, generous, and connected; to touch others’ lives and to enrich them
and us in the process. Listening— empathic listening— promotes growth in
the listener, the one listened to, and the relationship between them.
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307
That better listening enhances our own well-being is the natural per-
spective of psychology, in which all human behavior is seen as motivated
by the agendas of the self. But when you narrow down human relations to
a collection of selves, and the self to the early conditioning of the child,
what you have left is fixed characters, and you’re stuck with them.
It’s a dogma of American life that all actions are motivated by self-
interest. But this dogma is false. The tendency to view our lives on the
planet from the perspective of individualism obscures the larger view that
we are part of systems within systems: the family, the extended family, the
community, the nation—vast networks of associations. The truth is that
looking inside ourselves can show us only part of the reason for feeling
empty and unfulfilled.
Should the idea of self- interest include interest in others? Yes. Benev-
olent self- interest goes hand in hand with interest in others. But is it only
a matter of enlightened self- interest to take an interest in other people?
Trade-offs have their place in the conduct of life. But it would leave
too much out of the story of human affairs to give an account of related-
ness to others only in terms of utilitarianism.
Caring about other people, which takes shape in political justice, the
relief of suffering, and the love of family and friends, is fundamental to our
sense of who we are and what makes our lives hang together. Pressures that
block or obscure this impulse reduce, even damage us.
Respect for human dignity doesn’t mean only feeling sympathy for
others or doing for them. It means respecting them enough to listen to
them, to hear and appreciate their voices—to view them as subjects, wor-
thy of hearing, not just as objects of our needs.
Listening to others is an ethical good, part of what it means to have
just and fair dealings with other people. Listening is part of our moral com-
mitment to each other.
* * *
ber that we are separate selves. Openness and autonomy are correlated. If
you are to have the courage to be yourself, to stand squarely on your own
two feet, then you must accept that other people are entitled to their own
point of view. The idea isn’t to separate yourself from others but to let
them be themselves while you continue to be yourself.
Learning to listen involves a paradox of self- control: controlling your-
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self and letting go of control over the relationship. It’s like letting someone
else drive. To listen, you have to let go.
Trying harder to understand another person’s perspective takes effort,
but it isn’t just a skill to be studied and practiced. Hearing someone is an
expression of caring enough to listen.
One of the things I’ve hoped to do in this book is to help restore a
sense of balance to the way we think about relationships. First because
seeing our relationships as mutually defined enables us to change what we
get out of them by changing what we put into them. And second because
recognizing that we live in a web of relationships, which give meaning and
fullness to our lives, may inspire us to a little more generosity and concern
for other people.
Does talk of rebalancing relationships and rediscovering concern
sound a little pious? After all, you probably picked up this book to learn
a little more about listening, not to read a sermon on benevolence. Sorry.
But maybe the sympathy for other people that we’re born with is some-
thing we have to remind ourselves to express from time to time.
We all believe in fairness and respect for the rights of others. We
believe in compassion and justice and that everyone has a right to be
heard. Of course these standards are regularly violated. It remains that
they are valid standards. And they do from time to time galvanize us to
action—as when we somehow manage to listen instead of arguing in the
midst of a heated discussion or when we remember to take a little extra
time to hear what’s going on in someone’s life.
The obligation to listen can be experienced as a burden, and we all
sometimes feel it that way. But it is quite a different thing to be moved
by a sense that the people in our lives are eminently
worth
listening to, a
sense of their dignity and value. One thing we can all add a little more of is
understanding— respect, compassion, and fairness, the fundamental values
conveyed by listening.
* * *
to be listened to is that we never outgrow the need to communicate what
it’s like to live in our separate, private worlds of experience. Unfortunately,
there is no parallel need to listen. Maybe that’s why listening sometimes
seems in short supply. Listening isn’t a need we have; it’s a gift we give.
Index
Inde
Index
Index
Inde
Acceptance of others,
unshared thoughts and,
self-respect and, 30
191–192, 232, 266–267
39–41
unshared thoughts and, 39
Accommodation, 179,
Arguments.
See also
Attunement, 35, 254–255.
248–251
Disagreement
See also
Attention
Acknowledgment
alleviating, 119–124
Autonomy, 277–278, 307
cutting someone off and,
complaining without
Avoidance, 40, 155–156, 179
162
fighting and, 225–230
disagreement and,
defensive reacting and, 179 Bearing witness, 15–18
146–149, 228–230
disagreement and, 146–149 Being heard
gender and, 149–150
gender and, 149–150
asking for support and,
overview, 86–87, 146–147
listening to children and,
153–154
relationships and, 228–230
256–257
checking to see if the
via bearing witness, 15–18
listening to teenagers and,
person is busy and,
Active listening, problems
274–277
171–172
with, 90
overview, 117–126
within families, 235–251
Advice giving.
See also
reasons for, 119–120
office communications
Criticism
Assumptions in listening, 96,
and, 299–301
asking for, 106–107,
158, 159–166.
See also