|

Turning
Off the Conversation in Your Head
From
www.CoachingPastors.com
We’ve
all listened and asked questions since we were toddlers. It’s just that
most of us have never approached listening and asking as disciplines,
to be systematically learned, practiced and refined. There are lots of
listening techniques you can to communicate to another person that you
are paying attention—leaning forward, having an open posture, making eye
contact. But listening isn’t an outward posture we take on—it’s what’s
going on inside our heads that counts. If you learn to think like a coach,
the techniques will come naturally to you.
Here’s
a fun little exercise. Get out a pen and paper, or sit down at your computer
keyboard. Next, pick a favorite song that you know pretty well. Now, here’s
the challenge: Sing the song out loud, and while you are singing, simultaneously
write or type out the words to the pledge of allegiance. I’ll give you
a couple minutes.
How’d
it go? I always get stuck after a few lines, or I start writing random
words from the song into the pledge of allegiance. Even though the lines
of the pledge are burned into my brain from saying them over and over
in grade school, I can still completely forget what they are while I’m
saying something else. There are some things human beings can and can’t
multitask at. We can dance and sing at the same time, or use our legs
to walk while we talk, or even cook a meal while we are adding up the
cost of a home improvement project in our heads. But it’s tough for our
brains to do two different things with words at the same time.
This
is the fundamental challenge to listening well. The other person is talking
(that’s one thing involving words), and meanwhile we have a second, hidden
monologue going where we’re evaluating and responding to what is said
inside our heads (which makes two things). Our brains can’t do both at
once, so we slip in and out between the conversation with the other person
and the conversation in our heads. Every time we switch gears we lose
a few words, or a sentence, or a whole paragraph. At its worst, this leaves
us nodding and saying, “uh-huh” without a very clear idea of what the
other person is talking about.
Most
of us do better than that, at least most of the time. But let me give
you a real challenge: can you carry on a half hour conversation with someone
without losing a single word? (Try it – it’s a lot harder than it sounds!)
Setting a high standard can greatly increase the impact you have when
you’re working with others. One of my personal commitments to my coaching
clients is that when I am in a coaching appointment, I’m going to be all
there. For that hour, that individual is the only person in the world.
All my attention is focused within the appointment. One of the biggest
keys to listening well is simply making a serious, personal commitment
to be all there with the person you’re talking to. Will you make the commitment
to move your listening from good to great?
|