How We Listen

how we listen“I felt it shelter to speak to you.”-  Emily Dickinson

I am not sure if there is a more challenging aspect of relating than communicating. It is the currency of all relationships, personal and professional, and reflects us in the world more deeply than any other part of who we are.  Professionally, it is not uncommon for less qualified applicants to get a job over  more qualified competitors based solely on their ability to communicate. Our personal relationships thrive or fall victim to our willingness and capacity to disclose and listen to the people we love.

An ancient Greek philosopher Epictetus once commented that, “We have two ears and one mouth so that we can listen twice as much as we speak.” For all of my work on loving relationships, I have never been a good listener. In my earliest childhood memories, my capacity to articulate and charm almost landed me on TV and kept the peace in my dysfunctional home. I learn about my thoughts by speaking them; not surprisingly I married a strong, silent type who makes a living listening to people.

In some ways our very opposite styles of communicating fit; certainly, in my own life, I can attest to the fact that not everyone has the same need to be heard. Yet, I have also learned, often the hard way, that not listening to others with the same attention as you are given guarantees a bumpy road to relating. Even after decades with the same man, I must learn and re-learn how to listen to him. How many times he has forgiven me for the unconscious ways that I run over him with my fast-paced, fast-thinking articulation and kill the very thing I work so hard to nurture.

how we listenThere are no excuses for my poor listening ability because I know full well that even as I form my next thought in my head, I am only half listening. Even the best multitaskers among us cannot truly be listening while doing anything else. My children will attest to the lack of genuine attention they feel while half- listening in the midst of getting something else done.  So many communication errors occur in this half-awake state. We believe that we communicate when in fact the message has not been sent or is more likely misinterpreted.

This is largely a result of a thinking error that we all share. Often, we go to our conversations with an agenda, determined and sometimes desperate to have our point of view heard and acknowledged. We rarely go into them with the openheartedness of the explorer. Curiosity and a genuine desire to understand the person you are talking to changes everything. Creating the uninterrupted space to listen is so close to being loved that in the heart of the one being heard, there is no difference.

This is where our communication, both verbal and non-verbal, is a shelter. Speaking my heart to those who are closest to me are the safe havens of my life. We are always communicating- whether it is with what we choose to say or what we hold back. Our eye contact, the way we hold ourselves near others- all of these messages are exchanged continuously. Just as breathing changes by the consciousness we bring to it, adding deliberate and loving intention to what and how we communicate can build shelter in our lives.

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About the Author:

Wendy Strgar

Wendy Strgar is the owner and founder of Good Clean Love, manufacturer of all-natural love and intimacy products. Wendy is a sex educator focusing on Making Love Sustainable, a green philosophy of relationships which teaches the importance of valuing the renewable resources of love and family. She has learned that physical intimacy is an important component of sustaining healthy loving relationships through her own marriage of over 25 years. Wendy has a Masters degree in Organizational Development and Training and has taught personal development/career workshops for many years. She spent years in education reform and was a founder of two alternative educational charter schools. Most recently, the project to start the first publicly funded Children's Peace Academy in Oregon inspired her to start a for profit business to fund the work of teaching peace to children. Wendy lives in Eugene, Oregon with her husband, a psychiatrist, and their four children ages 11-20
Wendy Strgar's Website

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