Read The Lost Art of Listening Online
Authors: Michael P. Nichols
inevitably trigger a defensive reaction. For that matter, even “Haven’t you
taken the garbage out
yet?
” could provoke an emotional response. If you
don’t watch how you say things as well as what you say, it’s easy to provoke
those you love.
Then there are those touchy subjects that can almost be counted on
to set off an explosion. As I’ll explain in Chapters 6 and 9, topics likely to
be toxic among couples are money, children, and sex. To have a construc-
tive discussion about any of these, where both people really listen, requires
special effort. You might have to watch not only what you say and how you
say it but also where, when, and why.
This is not to imply that we need to spend our lives tiptoeing around
each other. What it does mean is that we may need to step back and calm
down, being aware of what sets us off and what sets off those we want to
communicate with, if we are to get through to each other.
When we don’t, many exchanges degenerate to such clever repartee
as “You’re such a bitch!” and “Oh, grow up!” before falling apart altogether
as someone storms out of the room.
Understanding the Rules of the Listening Game:
Beyond Linear Thinking
We don’t usually stop to examine patterns of misunderstanding in our
lives because we’re stuck in our own point of view. Misunderstanding
hurts, and when we’re hurt we tend to look outside ourselves for explana-
tions. But the problem isn’t just that when something goes wrong we look
for someone to blame. The problem is linear thinking. We reduce human
interactions to a matter of personalities. “He doesn’t listen because he’s
too self- absorbed.” “She’s hard to listen to because she goes on and on
about everything.” Some people blame themselves (“Maybe I’m not that
interesting”), but it’s usually easier to recognize the other person’s contri-
bution.
Attributing other people’s lack of understanding to character is armor
for ignorance and passivity. That some people repeat their annoying ways
with most people they come in contact with doesn’t prove that lack of
How Communication Breaks Down
53
responsiveness is fixed in character; it only proves that these individuals
trigger many people to play out the reciprocal role in their dramas of two-
part disharmony.
The fixed- character position assumes that it’s hard for people to
change. But you don’t change relationships by changing other people. You
change patterns of relating by changing yourself in relation to them. Per-
sonality is dynamic, not fixed. The dynamic personality position posits
that it is possible for people to change; all we have to do is change our
responses to each other. We are not victims—we are participants, in a real
way, and the consequences of our participation are profound.
To participate effectively, you have to know something about the
rules of the game.
I remember how confused I was the first time I saw a lacrosse game.
From where I sat it looked as if some kids were standing around while the
rest raced up and down the field, using their sticks to pass the ball back and
forth, club each other, or both. I got the gist of it—it was like soccer played
by Road Warriors—but a lot of it was hard to follow. Why, for instance,
did the team that lost the ball out of bounds sometimes get it back and
sometimes not? And why sometimes when one kid whacked another with
his stick did everybody cheer, while at other times the referee called a foul?
The problem was that I couldn’t see the whole field and didn’t know the
rules of the game.
The same disadvantages—not seeing the whole field and not know-
ing the rules of the game—keep us from understanding our successes and
failures at communicating with one another.
Earlier I said that listening is a two- person process, but even that is
oversimplified. Actually, even an uncomplicated communication has sev-
eral components: the listener, the speaker, the message, various implicit
messages, the context, and, because the process doesn’t flow one way from
speaker to listener, the listener’s response. Even a brief consideration of
these elements in the listening process reveals more reasons for misunder-
standing than simply bad faith on the part of the listener.
“What Are You Trying to Say?”
The message is the point of what a speaker says. But the message sent isn’t
always the one intended.
54
THE YEARNING TO BE UNDERSTOOD
A family of four is invited to spend Sunday afternoon at the
lake house of friends of the father. When the teenage daughter asks
if she can bring along a friend, her father says, “I don’t think we
should bring extra guests when we’re invited to dinner.” The daughter
looks hurt, and the man’s wife says, “You’re being silly; they never mind
extra company.” The man gets angry and withdraws, brooding over his
feeling that his wife always takes the children’s side and never listens to
him.
The problem here is a common one: the message sent wasn’t the
one intended. One of the unfortunate things we learn along with being
“polite” and not being “selfish” is not to say directly what we want. Instead
of saying “I want . . . ,” we say “Maybe we should . . . ” or “Do you want . . . ?”
When we’re taking a trip in the car and we get hungry, we say “Isn’t it
getting late?” (When I was growing up I learned that guests weren’t sup-
posed to put people to any trouble. If you went to someone’s house and
wanted a glass of water, you didn’t ask; you looked thirsty. If they offered
you something, you politely declined. Only if they insisted was it okay to
accept. A really good boy waited until a glass of water was offered at least
twice before accepting.)
Because this convention of indirectness is so universal, it doesn’t usu-
ally cause problems. If the other person in the room says “Are you cold?”
you can assume he means “Can we turn up the heat?” But indirectness
can cause problems when stronger feelings are involved. The father in
our example didn’t want his daughter to bring a friend. Perhaps his wife
was right; the people who invited them wouldn’t mind. But somehow
he
minded. Maybe he wanted his daughter to remain more a part of the fam-
ily and less an independent person with friends of her own. Or maybe he
wanted her to be part of the grownups’ conversation, instead of off with
her friend, because he found it easier to talk about the children’s doings
than his own. That’s the trouble with being indirect: there are always a lot
of
maybe
s
.
When we’re conflicted over certain of our own needs, we may infer
(rightly or wrongly) that others would object to even hearing our wishes,
much less acceding to them. Because indirectness leads to so much mis-
understanding, it does more harm than good. Two people can’t have an
honest disagreement about whether or not they want to move to another
How Communication Breaks Down
55
city as long as they engage in diversionary arguments about whether going
or staying would be better for the children.2
One reason others argue with us in a way that seems to negate our
feelings is that we blur the distinction between our feelings and the facts.
Instead of saying “I don’t want her to bring a friend,” the father tries to
cloud his motives and bolster his argument by appealing to
should
s. When
his wife argues with what he says instead of what he means, he feels
rejected.
Like every listener, he measured the intentions of other
speakers by what they said—or what he heard—and asked
that they measure him by what he meant to say.
As speakers we want to be heard—not merely listened to—we want
to be understood, heard for what we think we’re saying, for what we know
we meant. Similar impasses occur when we insist we said one thing and our
listener heard another. Instead of saying “What I meant to say was . . . ,” we
go on insisting what we
did
say.
“Why Don’t You Say What You Mean?”
Implicit messages tell us more than what’s being said; they tell us how we’re
meant to receive what’s being said. Depending on the situation, “Let’s
have lunch” could mean “I’m hungry,” “I’d like to see you again,” “No, I
don’t want to go to dinner with you,” or “Please leave now; I’m busy.” The
statements “I love you” and “I’m sorry” are notorious for having multiple
meanings. Knowing the other person can make it easier to decode implicit
messages; speculating about his or her motives can make it harder.
According to Gregory Bateson, one of the founders of family therapy,
all communications have two levels of meaning:
report
and
command
.3 The
2There are times, however, when the most effective statement of what you want is less than
completely candid. For people who have trouble saying no, rather than trying to explain
why they don’t want to do something, it may be easier to say “I’d love to, but I can’t.”
3Jurgen Ruesch and Gregory Bateson,
Communication: The Social Matrix of Psychiatry
(New
York: Norton, 1951).
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THE YEARNING TO BE UNDERSTOOD
report (or message) is the information conveyed by the words. The sec-
ond or command level (which Bateson called
metacommunication
) conveys
information about how the report is to be taken and a statement of the
nature of the relationship.
If a wife scolds her husband for running the dishwasher when it’s only
half full and he says okay but turns around and does the same thing two
days later, she may be annoyed that he doesn’t listen to her. She means the
message. But maybe he didn’t like the metamessage. Maybe he doesn’t like
her telling him what to do as though she were his mother.
In attempting to define the nature of our relationships we qualify our
messages by posture, facial expression, and tone of voice. For example,
a rising inflection on the last two words turns “You did that on purpose”
from an accusation to a question. The whole impact of a statement may
change depending on which words are emphasized. Consider the differ-
ence between “Are
you
telling me it isn’t true?” and “Are you telling me
it
isn’t
true?” Pauses, gestures, and gaze also tell us how to interpret what’s
being said. Although we may not need the ponderous term
metacommuni-
cation
, misunderstandings about how messages should be taken is a major
reason for problems in listening.
One winter when I was working hard and feeling sorry for myself, I
wrote to a sympathetic friend and said jokingly that I was running away to
spend two weeks on the white beaches of a deserted Caribbean island. The
only trouble was that I didn’t
say
it, I
wrote
it, and she missed the irony I
intended. The medium didn’t carry my tone of voice or the facial expres-
sion that modified the message. Instead of getting the sympathy I was
(indirectly) asking for, I got back a rather testy note saying that it’s nice to
know that some people have the time and money to indulge themselves.
We
know what we mean; problems arise when we expect others to.
How is our communication to be taken? Is it chat? A confession? An out-
pouring of emotion? When our listeners fail to grasp that we’re upset and
need to have our feelings listened to, who’s to blame?
A woman told her husband that something her boss said made her
afraid she might be in for trouble at work. The husband responded by say-
ing no, he didn’t think so; it didn’t sound that way. When she replied that
he didn’t listen to her, both of them got upset. She was annoyed because
he didn’t listen to her feelings. He was hurt because he
was
listening. He
just didn’t realize how upset she was.
How Communication Breaks Down
57
Perhaps to some people this woman’s upset would have been apparent.
Maybe a friend would have realized that she needed to have her feelings
acknowledged, not disagreed with. But she wasn’t married to that friend.
She was married to a man who didn’t automatically understand how she
wanted to be listened to. (Some people try to make that clear: “I’m worried
about something, and I need to talk about it.” “I need some advice.” “I just
need you to listen.”)
E-mail makes correspondence so easy that people often send messages
in a personal frame of mind that get read by someone in a business frame
of mind.
Long- distance boyfriend sends his girlfriend an e-mail in the morn-
ing, saying, “Good morning.” She’s at work and doesn’t respond. He later
sends another message with a specific question, and she replies with an
answer to the question. He responds with a hurt message about how she
couldn’t bother to take the time to say good morning. What their e-mails