Thursday, March 7, 2013

Seek to understand vs just be understood



Communication is the most important skill in life. You spend years learning how to read and write, and years learning how to speak. 

But what about listening? 

What training have you had that enables you to listen so you really, deeply understand another human being? Probably none???? 

If you're like most people, you probably seek first to be understood; you want to get your point across. And in doing so, you may ignore the other person completely, pretend that you're listening, selectively hear only certain parts of the conversation or attentively focus on only the words being said, but miss the meaning entirely. 

So why does this happen? 

Because most people listen with the intent to reply, not to understand. You listen to yourself as you prepare in your mind what you are going to say, the questions you are going to ask, etc. You filter everything you hear through your life experiences, your frame of reference. You check what you hear against your autobiography and see how it measures up. And consequently, you decide prematurely what the other person means before he/she finishes communicating. 

Sound familiar? 

Because you so often listen autobiographically, you tend to respond in one of four ways:

Evaluating: You judge and then either agree or disagree.

Probing: You ask questions from your own frame of reference.

Advising: You give counsel, advice, and solutions to problems.

Interpreting: You analyze others' motives and behaviors based on your own experiences.

Truly listening well requires us to ask interactive questions allowing the recipient to derive a personal conclusion verses us being the source of their answer. 

Remember your NOT God, Jesus, or Superman and that's okay. 


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