I'm sorry what was the question?
Wiseacre!
@LadyAlyxandrea lol
Before my wife left me she said: "you never listen to me."ā¦ At least that is what I think she said.
I'm the best listener I've ever met.
It comes from 15-20 years of being too shy to talk and therefore doing nothing but listening. And being smart enough to take full advantage of whatever opportunity presents itself.
@stinkeye_a That was my beginning--shyness led to listening and watching. Then I studied it.
I can relate to this. I was shy when I was younger so I wouldn't talk much, but I did listen and pay attention. When I went out with my friends, they would go dance and I would watch, or should I say study, people. Now, I listen but also participate in the conversation more.
Imagine if you and another champion listener tried to have a conversation. There would be some kind of anti-noise feedback loop that might vacuum up every sound in the universe! It would be quietly, attentively awesome.
I'm usually pretty good at listening, but there are times my mind wanders. When my father retells something that happened to him and his story takes longer than the actual events, I find it awfully hard to stay focused.
keep off the weed or smoke more
Sorry, what was the question...?
I work at listening. Not a problem with well thought out conversation. Now, blather is another matter. I lead a couple of small groups, and always ask the members to listen, and not think about what their response will be.
@Or-Humanist You've hit the nail on the head -- undivided attention = mindfulness.
Since I have a hearing loss, I'd say I do not listen well, lol.
@marga I also suffered some hearing loss (too many front row seats at the '70s and '80s concerts). It has always helped me to watch a speaker so I can see the lips if I missed something. In college, that made retention shoot up and note taking drop way down. Now if people speak too softly or mumble, I lose interest and quit listening.
I try to listen very carefully to the people Iām talking to. Pulp Fiction was what did it for me - the deleted scene where Uma Thurman and Travolta are talking about being a listener, or waiting to speak really struck a chord for me.
I realized how disrespectful it is to the person Iām talking to, and really myself, to be a āwait to speakā kind of person.
My trouble these days is engaging in the kinds of conversations that hold my attention.
there's a difference between being talked at and a conversation. talked at is like one person shooting the other. conversation is more like a good volley of table tennis but slower.
I like that analogy @LeighShelton
@ModernDayViking That's the weakness of many of us, undivided attention. It's so much easier when I'm interested in the subject. Unless the speaker is naked, of course! Lol
@EllenDale i conquer lol
I usually just wait for the person to say a trigger word that remind me or a quote from a song it a movie, then start singing or acting out the movie. Not sure if that answers the question. What were we talking about again?
Communication is 7% verbal 53% visual and can't remember the other one so we don't really listen that well anyway . My problem is that I take the words said literally when some people have double meanings for things or won't you to read their minds
@SimonMorgan1 Wow. Most people have never heard of Albert Mehrabian's work! Most of us listen to the 7% verbal part. Mehranian found that IF there was incongruency between verbal (7%) and nonverbal (93%), people believed the nonverbal. Fascinating subject!
@SimonMorgan1 Good on ya!
A really really good listener. I worked in Mental Health - what else would I be?
I still think getting an education was a a self defense move. So many people have told me terrible things about their lives - because I listen. Also not so terrible things.
@EllenDale I wish I could have? I no longer work (disabled) but I was not good about leaving it all at the door.
I work on that harder now then I did then.
People have the ability to change their circumstances (usually - my exception was teens and kids - and now I'd add in disability to some extent) - and obsessing about them being unwilling to change and their being unhappy? Just not good. Benefits no one.
I think I believed Psych was a science. So my brain wanted to come up with an answer. That's not how that works.
@RavenCT I bet it's what parents and grandparents get caught up in with children. My granddaughter is PDD-NOS, the highest form of autism, and she reacts to the slightest thing in a very emotional way. Because the father abdicated his personal and financial responsibility, her mother and I raised her. I'm surprised we didn't pull out every hair on our heads because of repetition she required!
I like the Chinese meaning of listening.
My wife says I'm autism spectrum, and I agree. So, listening is a thing I have to work at. I'm OK when I attend, but sometimes focus on other things too much.
Depends on where and with whom..and the conversation..generally about 90%..except for Drumpf..I tune him entirely out..
I actually listen to everything going on around me very closely all the time, but due to the fact that in addition to what I'm listening to I'm generally thinking about at least six other things too (cats, cakes, a song I heard in 1982, bicycles, 1920s German films, why tractors sometimes have weights stuck on the front, stuff like that) I give the impression of not listening to anything. I've had to go through life with teachers, my parents and assorted partners all yelling at me for not listening as a result, even though I can repeat everything they've said to me in the last week or so.
I listen and pay attention very intently. Sometimes when I'm too emotionally wound up I might not react as much or as appropriately as I should but even then I will remember what was said with accuracy and come back to it later if possible. I want to be able to communicate and if I don't pay attention to what was said and how it was said how can any of us hope to have any kind of connection? I guess for me connection and understanding I'm not ever truly alone is central to life.
I donāt listen very well at all.
@NothinnXpreVails Ah, an honest respondent! Cheers to you! Lol
Lol @EllenDale
In my life, listening is situational, even though I strive to be present in every conversation. This being posted in this sub-forum, I will treat my example as such.
If I want to listen and let the other person know I understand them, it helps to repeat what they say to you when they finish.
IE: Them - I feel lost and out of it when it comes to your feelings.
You - I understand that you feel lost and out of it when it comes to my feelings.
The point is to reinforce what you hear and to communicate your understanding. It works wonders, but can slow down a conversation.
Sorry.
What was the question?
@Uncorrugated Vroom Vroom! It's hard to hear over that bike motor! Lol
Serious. I was a reporter for a while, so it does help you become a better listener. And I'm naturally curious, so I love to ask questions.
I am probably the best listener ever. A lot better than Obama, who left our listening forces in sad shape.
I'm having Jared fix out listening program. Unless they are wiretaping me and then I am against it.
I'm a fantastic listener. Unfotunately, most people are not very interesting. I am the human boring ass magnate from hell. I must be sending out signals because they know I am easy prey. I think I have heard everybody's life story east of the Mississippi. I am a bartender without a bar. Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!
@ollieberry If you have no bar, go lay a claim! Simple!
I'm sorry. Could you please repeat that?
Iām sorry, what did you say?
@Cosmo_blues I said HOW WELL DO YOU LISTEN ACTIVELY? Read my lips! Lol