When Old Folks Talk
July 15, 2011 by Admin · Leave a Comment
Grandma starts to talk and the smiles become forced and the eyes start to roll, because Grandma is going into a recital of her current medical concerns. There’s the hearing problem, the blood pressure, the bowel stuff, the swollen ankles, and that mysterious dizziness that pops up from time to time. Then there’s what she can’t eat anymore and the new medications. And don’t get her started on her teeth!
Welcome to Life as it Turns Out. The older we get and the more broken down we get, the more our world shrinks to our immediate environment and concerns. Finally our own body and its depredations constitute our most passionate focus. And that’s the way it is.
Yes, I am sure you have better things to do than listen to the ‘organ recital’ of the elderly.
Your life is full of meaning and activity and you can take your healthy body for granted. And this too shall pass, and your horizons will shrink and you will become grateful for anybody to listen to what is most important and pressing to you at that time, like your prostate.
So, please listen and respond with your own ‘organ recital”: an empathetic ear, a kindly eye, and a caring heart.
Pay your dues. Your turn is coming.
Filed under Social Communication · Tagged with Dr. Carol Fleming, improve listening skills, It's the Way You Say It:Becoming Articulate, Respect old folks, When old folks talk
How to listen when people speak
April 28, 2011 by Admin · Leave a Comment
She says to him, “When are you going to do that?”. An objective listener would have described her question as straightforward and neutral, seeking information.
She actually had two listeners; one who was in fact objective (me) and her soon-to-be ex-husband who was in no way objective. He was hurt, baffled and angry about the divorce, the betrayal, (the other man). This became evident only later, when he was recounting this conversation to someone else, as follows:
“And she just said to me: (His brow lowered, his face twisted in anger) , ‘And just WHEN are you going to DO that!!!?’”, his voice, his face, his entire body dedicated to the dramatization of accusation and intense hostility.
If you subtract what I heard in the original exchange from what he recounted in his retelling, you find yourself with a huge slug of hurt and anger that emerged completely from his emotional state. He was perfectly willing to attribute the venom to her. He was telling the truth, you understand, not about her, but about how he experienced what he had heard..
How we color what we hear
Once again, we are witness to the fact that we are emotional beings who are sometimes rational. We know that our emotions color what we say, but perhaps we are not so aware that they also color what we hear. We tend to think that we are clear observers of the life around us. In truth, we are seldom as clear as we think we are.
What can we learn from this?
- When hearing someone’s version of an event, be aware that the emotional component is usually lurking under the guise of reportage. Always use a grain of salt while taking it in.
- Most of us can’t really listen to other people when they talk because we’re so engulfed in our own emotions. To really HEAR what someone is saying, you need to be aware of your own preoccupations and set them aside so you can be more available to the other.
Filed under Social Communication · Tagged with Dr. Carol Fleming, how to listen when people speak, how we color what we hear, improve listening skills, Social Communicaton
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