Read The Lost Art of Listening Online
Authors: Michael P. Nichols
The Lost Art of Listening
The Lost Art
of Listening
…
How Learning to Listen
Can Improve Relationships
SeCond edItIon
Michael P. nichols
tHe GUILFoRd PReSS
New York London
© 2009 Michael P. Nichols
Published by The Guilford Press
A Division of Guilford Publications, Inc.
72 Spring Street, New York, NY 10012
www.guilford.com
All rights reserved
The information in this volume is not intended as a substitute for
consultation with healthcare professionals. Each individual’s health
concerns should be evaluated by a qualified professional.
No part of this book may be reproduced, translated, stored in a
retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means,
electronic, mechanical, photocopying, microfilming, recording, or
otherwise, without written permission from the Publisher.
Printed in the United States of America
This book is printed on acid-free paper.
Last digit is print number: 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Nichols, Michael P.
The lost art of listening : how learning to listen can improve
relationships / Michael P. Nichols. — 2nd. ed.
p. cm.
Includes index.
ISBN 978-1-60623-064-0 (hardcover : alk. paper)
ISBN 978-1-59385-986-2 (pbk. : alk. paper)
1. Listening. 2. Interpersonal relations. 3. Interpersonal
communication. I. Title.
BF323.L5N53 2009
153.6′8—dc22
2008054617
Contents
Contents
1
How Listening Shapes Us and Connects Us to Each Other
The Real Reasons People Don’t Listen
“When Is It
My
Turn?”
—
The Heart of Listening:
The Struggle to Suspend Our Own Needs
“You Hear Only What You Want to Hear”
:
How Hidden Assumptions Prejudice Listening
“Why Do You Always Overreact?!”:
How Emotionality Makes Us Defensive
v
vi
Contents
“Take Your Time—I’m Listening”:
How to Let Go of Your Own Needs and Listen
“I Never Knew You Felt That Way”:
“I Can See This Is Really Upsetting You”:
How to Defuse Emotional Reactivity
Listening Between Intimate Partners
11
“Nobody around Here Ever Listens to Me!”:
How to Listen and Be Heard within the Family
12
From “Do I
Have
To?” to “That’s Not Fair!”:
Listening to Children and Teenagers
Being Able to Hear Friends and Colleagues
Index
314
Introduction
Introduction
Introduction
Nothing hurts more than the sense that the people we care about aren’t
really listening. We never outgrow the need to have our feelings known.
That’s why a sympathetic ear is such a powerful force in human relation-
ships—and why the failure to be understood is so painful.
My ideas about listening have been sharpened by thirty-five years as
a psychoanalyst and family therapist. Refereeing arguments between inti-
mate partners, coaching parents to communicate with their children, and
struggling myself to sustain empathy as my patients faced their demons
has led me to the conclusion that much of the conflict in our lives can be
explained by one simple fact: people don’t really listen to each other.
Talking without listening is like snipping an electrical cord in half
and hoping that somehow something will light up. Most of the time, of
course, we don’t deliberately set out to break the connection. In fact, we’re
often baffled and dismayed by feeling left in the dark.
Modern culture has developed conceptions of individualism that
picture us finding our own bearings within, declaring independence from
the webs of interlocution that formed us. It’s as though when we become
finished persons we outgrow our need for attention, like training wheels.
All this is not to say that we can’t be autonomous, in the sense of being
self- directing, even original, able to think and act on our own. But we
cannot escape the human condition and become secure and satisfied with-
out conversation— conversation in a broad sense, meaning some kind of
interchange with others.
1
2
Introduction
Contemporary pressures have, regrettably, shrunk our attention spans
and impoverished the quality of listening in our lives. We live in hurried
times, when dinner is something you zap in the microwave and keeping
up with the latest books and movies means reading the reviews. That’s all
we’ve got time for. Running to and from our many obligations, we get a
lot of practice in not listening. When we’re in the car and the radio is on,
sometimes it’s interesting and we pay attention, other times we have to
concentrate on the road or we get sidetracked with a thought, and minutes
go by without our hearing a word of what was said. When we’re watching
TV and the commercials come on, half the time we don’t hear a thing.
We’re bombarded with so many images—from television, e-mail, junk
mail, the Internet, cell phones, BlackBerrys, iPods, pagers, faxes—that our
attention is fractionated. We like to think we’re good at multitasking. We
check our e-mail while talking on the phone. We look for things to buy
in catalogues while watching TV. We fool ourselves into thinking that we
can do more than one thing at a time. The truth is that we just end up
doing one thing after another poorly.
We’ve gained unparalleled access to information and lost something
very important. We’ve lost the habit of concentrating our attention. From
pop music at the gym to commercials on TV and radio, we’re bombarded
with so much noise that we’ve become experts at tuning things out. If a
television show doesn’t grab our attention in the first two minutes, we
change the channel; if we’re listening to someone who doesn’t get right to
something we’re interested in, we tune out.
In the limited time we still preserve for family and friends, conversa-
tion is often preempted by soothing and passive distractions. Too tired to
talk and listen, we settle instead for the lulling charms of electronic devices
that project pictures, make music, or bleep across display screens. Is it this
way of life that’s made us forget how to listen? Perhaps. But maybe the
modern approach to life is the effect rather than the cause of the decline of
meaningful discourse. Maybe we lead this kind of life because we’re seek-
ing some sort of solace, something to counteract the dimming of the spirit
we feel when no one is listening.
How we lost the art of listening is certainly a matter for debate. What
isn’t debatable is that the loss leaves us with an ever- widening hole in
our lives. It might take the form of a vague sense of discontent, sadness,
Introduction
3
or deprivation. We miss the consolation of lending an attentive ear and
of receiving the same in return, but we don’t know what’s wrong or how
to fix it. Over time this lack of listening impoverishes our most important
relationships. We hurt each other unnecessarily by failing to acknowledge
what the other one has to say. Whatever the arena, our hearts experience
the failure to be heard as an absence of concern.
Conflict doesn’t necessarily disappear when we acknowledge each
other’s point of view, but it’s almost certain to get worse if we don’t. So
why don’t we take time to hear each other? Because the simple art of lis-
tening isn’t so simple.
Often it’s a burden. Not, perhaps, the perfunctory attention we grant
as part of the give-and-take of everyday life. But the sustained attention
of careful listening—that takes strenuous and unselfish restraint. To listen
well we must forget ourselves and submit to the other person’s need for
attention.
While some people may be easier to listen to than others, conversa-
tions take place between two people, both of whom contribute to the out-
come. Unfortunately, when we fail to get through to each other, we have a
tendency to fall back on blaming. It’s his fault: he’s selfish and insensitive.
Or it’s my fault: I’m too dependent or don’t express myself well.
Most failures of understanding are not due to self- absorption or bad
faith, but to our own need to say something. We tend to react to what
is said, rather than concentrating on what the other person is trying to
express. Emotional reactions make us respond without thinking and crowd
out understanding and concern. Each of us has characteristic ways of
reacting defensively. We don’t hear what’s said because something in the
speaker’s message triggers hurt, anger, or impatience.
Unfortunately, all the advice in the world about “active listening”
can’t overcome the maddening tendency to react defensively to each