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WHY NO ONE CARE WHAT YOU HAVE TO SAY

M

Mag Pie

Guest
People love to talk about themselves. For many of us, “Me” is our favorite topic of discussion. We love to talk about our experiences, share what we know, and give other people advice. I often wonder if we realize that nobody is listening. Our words are falling on deaf ears. There is another way to interact with people that will build deep and lasting relationships.

Here are three practices for making a real impact on the lives of other people:

1. Stop Talking About Yourself and Your Interests
I know one person who asks me a question, lets me answer for a few seconds, and then interrupts me to spend the next 10 minutes talking about himself again. I leave this kind of meeting feeling drained.

I doubt that most people purposefully dominate conversations. Nor is their intent to be a know it all. I suspect, rather, that many people lack the self-awareness to realize that they mostly talk about themselves.

It’s not that you can’t ever talk about yourself but that it must be rare. Leading every conversation by talking about your interests and experiences is a monologue, not a dialogue. What to do instead of talking about yourself?

2. Learn to Ask Thoughtful Questions
One of the most life-giving things that you can do for another person is to take an interest in him. The way to do this is to ask thoughtful questions. My friend David Makela interviewed 365 people last year in Laguna Beach. He asked them four simple questions:

  • How would you describe your life today in one word?
  • If you could change one thing in the world, what would you change?
  • What is one goal or dream you would like to accomplish one year from today?
  • If your life were a movie, what would the storyline and title be?
I was one of the 365 people that David interviewed. It was energizing to have a person ask me questions about my thoughts, dreams, concerns, struggles, and aspirations.

Taking an interest in others means that you stop talking about yourself and instead ask thoughtful questions. Once you have asked those questions, the next practice is to:

3. Commit to Empathetic Listening
Steve Covey in his book The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People says,

Unless you’re influenced by my uniqueness, I’m not going to be influenced by your advice

Covey argues that if you want to be an effective and influential person, you must build the skill of empathetic listening.

There are five ways to listen when a person is talking.

  1. Ignore them
  2. Pretend to listen
  3. Selective listening (Hearing only parts of the conversation)
  4. Attentive listening (Paying attention and focusing on the words)
  5. Empathetic listening (Looking to listen and understand)
At a minimum, we should be committed to attentively listening. But my ultimate goal should be empathetic listening.

Empathetic listening is working hard to see the world the way the person speaking sees the world. Empathetic listening is listening for feeling and meaning. Empathetic listening is seeking to deeply understand a person.

You can’t listen attentively or empathetically when you are talking about yourself. In fact, you can’t listen well when you are talking at all. You can’t empathetically listen when you are reading “your story” into what another person is saying. Empathetic listening is:

  • Marriage Building
  • Good Parenting
  • Missional
  • Life Giving to the one being listened to
Empathetic Listening helps builds deep relationships.

Let’s stop having monologues. Let’s stop dominating conversations. Let’s learn to ask good questions. Let’s commit to empathetic listening.
 
I have to agree in spirit. It seems simple and ought to be but in practice seems so hard to achieve especially in the short bursts that chat rooms are designed for. The biggest problem (and here I go with I) I seem to have is to remember to step back and try to put myself in the other persons place for a second before I respond. Or even sometimes more importantly decline to respond in the case of trolls.
 
I have to agree in spirit. It seems simple and ought to be but in practice seems so hard to achieve especially in the short bursts that chat rooms are designed for. The biggest problem (and here I go with I) I seem to have is to remember to step back and try to put myself in the other persons place for a second before I respond. Or even sometimes more importantly decline to respond in the case of trolls.
I get what your saying..and in chat I think its harder to slow down and step back...even harder to not respond when some fool trolls you lol
 
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