Listen More Than You Speak

When you’re ‘talking’ to others, what you should really be trying to do is listen.

Don’t:

  • Just wait for your turn to talk.
  • Engage in one-upmanship or verbal brinksmanship. Conversations are not debates, and you don’t need to win.
  • Sermonize or lecture without a podium in front of you.
  • Feel the urge to craft a linguistic epiphany in every deep conversation. This actually compromises depth.
  • Fake interest — people can sense insincerity as easily as you can.

Do:

  • Temporarily abandon your agenda.
  • Ask and listen more than you talk.
  • Listen intently — try to hear the unsaid words, the unspoken context.
  • Validate what others are feeling — connect emotionally before logically.
  • Believe you can learn something from everyone.
  • Embrace silence. It feels deadly, but is not deadly.
  • Give your inner voice the same grace and patience you give others.

“To listen well, we must create a climate which is neither critical, evaluative, nor moralizing.”

~Carl Rogers (via an excellent Aeon article by Pam Weintraub)