๐ The Listening Muscle
Talk is cheap, try deep listening. Neuroscientists research the hear/listen paradigm while psychologists ponder spatial thinking as the foundation of thought.
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โWe have two ears and one mouth so that we can listen twice as much as we speak.โ - Epictetus, Greek Stoic philosopher
Hello, weโre Alice and we are always in a state of wander...Listening to our selves can be enlightening โAboriginal people practice deep listening, an almost spiritual skill, based on respect,โ writes Jens Korff for Australian Aboriginal culture platform Creative Spirits. Called 'dadirri' in the Ngungikurungkurr language of the Daly River, deep listening is inner, still awareness. โDadirri recognises the deep spring that is inside us,โ says Aboriginal writer and senior Elder Miriam-Rose Ungunmerr-Baumann. โWe call on it and it calls to us. It is something like what you call 'contemplation'.โ
According to Avi Kluger, professor of organizational behavior at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, listening is a skill that can be practiced. Listening resembles a muscle, he writes in the Harvard Business Review. โIt requires training, persistence, effort, and most importantly, the intention to become a good listener. It requires clearing your mind from internal and external noiseโand if this isnโt possible, postponing a conversation for when you can truly listen without being distracted.โ
๐ง Listen: Navajo Historian, Wally Brown, teaches about the old saying to โJust Listenโ.
The noble cause of listening
Being deeply listened to makes us real, writes neuroscientist Mark Brady in Sacred Listening:ย Further Teachings for Deepening Practice [CreateSpace, 2016]. โMuch like Margery Williams' Skin Horse in the children's classic, The Velveteen Rabbit, having someone deeply and truly understand and accept us naked and exposed underneath all the masks and public personas allows us to have the truth of our experience accurately reflected back to us. โฆBeing listened to requires someone to do the listening, someone to bear witness to our deepest being. There is no โbeing listened toโ without a listener, and inevitably both listener and speaker are beneficially changed in the process,โ claims Brady, the Honorable Director of non-profit The Global Listening Centre (GLC).
The hear/listen paradigmย
Hearing and listening are related but distinct processes, writes communication-development company Speakeasy. Hearing is the passive act of perceiving sound using the ears, an automatic physiological process that does not require effort or attention. โListening, in contrast, is the active process of making meaning from sound signals.ย Listening requires focused attention, intention, and conscious effort to understand. Hearing is involuntary and listening is voluntary. Hearing involves only the ears, while listening engages the brain to interpret meaning. Hearing can be passive, but listening requires active effort and attention. Hearing is about perceiving sounds and listening is making sense of sounds.โ
The lost art of listening
The effect of bad listening is profound, says New York Times contributor Kate Murphy. โAnyone who has shared something personal and received a thoughtless or uncomprehending response knows how it makes your soul want to crawl back into its hiding place,โ she writes in Youโre Not Listening, What Youโre Missing & Why it Matters [Harvill Secker, 2020].
Murphy spent two years analyzing academic research on listening and interviewed numerous people who are paid to listen including spies, priests and psychotherapists. โEveryone is so intent on expressing their own opinion, or theyโre so distracted by technology or by their own thoughts, that itโs making us isolated, misinformed and intolerant,โ Murphy tells The Guardian. โI wanted to raise awareness of the value and great joy of listening.โ
Active listening
Your lips move, but I canโt hear what youโre saying โฆ
For those that do listen well, psychologists Carl Rogers and Richard Farson coined the term โactive listeningโ in 1957. It presents the method as one that โrequires that we get inside the speaker, that we grasp, from his point of view, just what it is he is communicating to us.ย More than that, we must convey to the speaker that we are seeing things from his point of view.โ
Active listening is aย communication skillย that involves going beyond simply hearing the words that another person speaks. โIt's about actively processing and seeking to understand the meaning and intent behind them. It requires being a mindful and focused participant in the communication process,โ explains clinical psychologist Arlin Cuncic, author of The Anxiety Workbook [2017, Callisto Media].
Active listening techniques include: being fully present in the conversation, showing interest by practicing good eye contact, noticing (and using) non-verbal cues, asking open-ended questions to encourage further responses, paraphrasing and reflecting back what has been said, listening to understand rather than to respond, and withholding judgment and advice.
Active listening involves mastering a whole host of other skills โ from learning how to read subtle cues to controlling your own emotional response. It requires both empathy and self-awareness, writes workplace expert Amy Gallo for Harvard Business Review. โActive listening is when you not only hear what someone is saying, but also attune to their thoughts and feelings. It turns a conversation into an active, non-competitive, two-way interaction.โ
Clinical psychologist Sabrina Romanoff tells Verywellmind that deep listening โrequires de-centering from oneโs fixed position to be fully present with another. It helps people feel more understood and strengthens relationships as it signals a willingness to sit with the otherโs perspective and empathy for their situation instead of singular focus on oneself."
Listen, freedom
The โtalking stickโ, originally referred to as a speaker's staff, is a tool of Indigenous democracy used by many tribes, especially the indigenous peoples of the Northwest Coast in North America. The talking stick is passed around the group and allows for multiple people to speak in turn.
In the wake of George Floydโs death, Rory Tyer, an executive coach for Go Innovation attended a protest rally and community listening session in a small Southern U.S. town. โIt was encouraging to see a crowd composed of people from many ages, races, and social backgrounds,โ he writes. During the listening session, people signed up for two-minute slots and stood in front of the crowd with a microphone. There was no agenda except to listen. โIf I had to summarize one of the major themes I heard repeated in different ways by people of color, it would be this:ย Nobody has listened to us, and thatโs why youโre seeing the anger and passion youโre seeing now. Nobody has listened.โ
โFor our freedom of speech to workโto have meaning or the power to improve our democracyโwe need to listen to one another,โ writes Darren Walker, President of the Ford Foundation. โIn fact, we have a responsibility to listen, because listening allows us to extend the freedom of speech to others. This is why the right toย assemble is so closely linked to the right to free speech. They share an amendment because speech is meaningless without an audience.โ
The disconnection problem
โWeโve become ideologically segregated,โ writes Ryan Kashtan for the Listen First Project, which comprises 500 organizations combating toxic division by bringing Americans together. Modern media has created more options than ever for us to reinforce our own worldviews. He claims that we listen to our favorite news sources, and on Facebook, we de-friend those who disagree with usโor, as he claims, we at least roll our eyes when they post. โWhen weโre confronted with something we donโt like, we reflexively lash out. We double down, we entrench ourselves, and we recite our most battle-worn talking points. In other words, weโve lost our ability toย listen. Yes, weย hearย those with whom we disagree. But our visceral reactions take over from there. When we donโt understand or accept another point of view, we donโt ask questions. We donโt engage in conversation. We donโt probe for common ground. We seek either submission or vengeance. We accuse and insult.โ
Speech bubbles
Not only are we actively disconnecting from one anotherโs humanityโeven as we become more connected than ever beforeโbut we also seem more willing and able to disconnect from certain kinds of information, writes Darren Walker, President of the Ford Foundation. โWe tend to curate the information that comes our way, while social and commercial media try to give us what they think we want. We engage with stories that confirm our assumptions and biases, that do not challenge or expand our view of the world. Online monologues allow their writers to dig deeper and deeper into their own thoughts without considering the views of others. We become more entrenched in our own views. In some cases, it is almost as if weโre just talking to ourselves.โ
This shows up on a bigger platform. Kate Murphy argues that our growing failure to listen has dire political consequences because we are no longer willing to engage with our opponentsโ points of view, writes The Guardian. In the US, for instance, โsenators used to meet in a communal dining room where they talked to each otherโฆ They humanized each other. Now people are intent on being separate and demonizing one another. Itโs not just that they donโt agree. They think the other person is badโฆ You canโt start listening if you think the other person is fundamentally an idiot or a bad person.โย
โDemocracy, as with all human endeavors, is imperfect,โ continues Kashtan. But that imperfection is not an excuse for ambivalence or complacency. Consensus building and compromise require real effort and difficult tradeoffs. โWe wonโt always agree. Even with a common set of facts, no two people share the same set of values. But we should cherish the diversity of our values and seek to meld their strengths in our common pursuit of a more perfect union and a more peaceful and prosperous world. Without trying to understand the different experiences that have shaped our disparate ways of life, we risk never-ending gridlock, stagnation, and in our darkest moments, even war. But if we can start with a shared sense of facts, and explain to one another why we react to and interpret those facts the way we do, we can heal our divisions.โ
Into the deep
โWalking, I am listening to a deeper way. Suddenly, all my ancestors are behind me. Be still, they say. You are a result of the love of thousands.โ โLinda Hogan, a Chickasaw novelist, essayist, and environmentalist.
A beautiful expression from Central Australia is "Can they bend the knees?" writes Korff for Creative Spirits. It inquires if you can sit down and truly listen, it is not only a prerequisite for effectively absorbing information, โbut also an allusion to how information is passed on in that area: by sitting on the red Earth.โ
Indigenous Elders teach their young about true listening, writes Wahinkpe Topa (Four Arrows) in Restoring the Kinship Worldview: Indigenous Voices introduce 28 Precepts for Rebalancing Life on Planet Earth. โListening that keeps us (1) remembering the ultimate, longer-term importance of our decisions and actions; (2) never forgetting our interconnectedness with all; (3) appreciating the nature of feelings and how they often relate to forgetting to accept the unknown; (4) holding onto authentic humility; and (5) remembering who we really are, with great appreciation for those who came before us who did similar work or who have made our work somewhat easier or clearer.โ
I hear you
โI use Deep Listening to guide me in hearing the voices of my ancestors, listening to the land, the sea and the stars and hearing the stories that want to be told,โ said Miriam-Rose Ungunmerr-Baumann. โIn our Aboriginal way, we learn to listen from our earliest days. We could not live good and useful lives unless we listened. This was the normal way for us to learnโฆ our people have passed on this way of listening for over 40,000 years.โ
Because Aboriginal people passed on stories orally, listening to other people was imperative. Listening to the storyteller was vital to reproduce the story accurately to the next generation of storytellers, writes Korff.ย โDeep listening describes the processes of deep and respectful listeningย to build communityโa way of encouraging people to explore and learn from the ancient heritage of Aboriginal culture, knowledge and understanding.โ
The word for deep listening in the Yorta Yorta language of the Murray River in Victoria is โGulpa Ngawalโ explains Laura Brearley, editor of the Gulpa Ngawal Indigenous Deep Listening book. โThe closest we can get to describing it in English is deep and respectful listening which builds community,โ says Brearley, a researcher at The Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology. Deep listening draws on many senses beyond what is simply heard. It can take place in silence. Deep listening can be applied as a way of being together, as a research methodology and as a way of making a difference. โItโs about tuning in, and โis based on stories, silences and the spaces that lie between.โ
Background noise
Accused of selective hearing? You could be off the hook. A report published in the Journal of Neuroscience shows how people who are focused on visual tasks (yes, looking at your phone) canโt hear what's going on around them. This is because hearing and vision tap the same brain region, called the association cortex. โYou may think that the person is ignoring you,โ said study co-author Nilli Lavie, a professor of psychology and brain sciences at University College London. โBut their brain just canโt respond to your voice.โ The researchers have dubbed this โinattentional deafness.โ The more taxing the visual task, the less likely the person is going to hear you, reports Today.
Wandering minds
And thatโs not all. The physiological reason our minds wander, even when we try to listen, is because the human brain is capable of processing words at a much higher speed than a person is able to speak. The average rate of speech for an American is about 125 words per minute; the human brain can process about 800 words per minute. โWhile a speakerโs words enter our brain at slow speed, we continue to think at high speed. So, we have plenty of time to absorb the words we hear and still think of other things at the same time,โ reports Speakeasy.
Words have left the chat
Actions speak louder than wordsโand happen first and faster, says Barbara Tversky, emerita Professor of Psychology at Stanford. In her book Mind in Motion: How Action Shapes Thought [Hachette, 2019], Tversky says that โspatial thinkingโ is the foundation of thought and evolved long before language. Catching a falling cup, rolling your eyesโresponses like these happen before people find the words to describe their actions and emotions.
โWe quickly grasp each otherโs actions and intentions and use those to plan our own,โ writes Tversky, now Professor of Psychology at Columbia University. โAll that happens far too fast for words.โ Think of Einstein imagining flying into space at the speed of light, an architect designing a building, a coach planning a football play and the players executing it.
Spatial thinking comes from moving and acting in the world. All creatures must do so to survive. According to Tversky, actions in space create spatial representations in the brain; simply looking isnโt enough. Spatial thinking is supported by all our senses. โAltogether half the cortex is involved in spatial thinking. Whatโs amazing is that abstract thought uses the same brain circuitry that underlies spatial thought.โ
The world is speaking, if we listen
Plants and animals, including humans, feel sound as well as hear it, and some of the most meaningful audio communication happens at frequencies that people can't hear. Frequency is the speed of vibrations, and it can travel in waves where the highs and the lows determine the pitch of sound. So sound is vibrational frequency we can hear, and nature can too. Nature has a unique ability to use frequency and sounds for communicating, and we are learning how to listen to its magical chorus.
โThe people [aborigines] themselves say, โDonโt you know anything? The plants talk to us.โโ โDr. Wade Davis, anthropologist and Explorer in Residence, National Geographic Society, Alice interview, 2002
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