1 / 25

Mindful Listening

Mindful Listening. By Donna Brown. What is mindfulness?. A way of focusing your attention that can produce significant benefits Opposite of multi-tasking.

kami
Télécharger la présentation

Mindful Listening

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mindful Listening By Donna Brown

  2. What is mindfulness? • A way of focusing your attention that can produce significant benefits • Opposite of multi-tasking

  3. Rebecca Shafir writes “our environment with its constant bombardment of stimuli challenges your innate ability to relax and focus on one task at a time.”

  4. Why do we listen? • We listen to obtain information • We listen to understand • We listen for enjoyment • We listen to learn • Listen Effectively from “Hitch” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQzduf9GH8M

  5. We remember 25% to 50% of what we hear. • That means when you talk to your boss, colleagues, customers, or spouse for 10 minutes, they pay attention to half of the conversation. • Good communication skills require a high level of self-awareness

  6. By understanding your personal style of communicating, you will go along way towards creating good and lasting impressions of others • The average person speaks at 125 words per minute, yet we can process up to 500 words per minute.

  7. How to be a good Listener

  8. What is active listening? • The process of listening, clarifying, giving feedback, and self-disclosing. • It involves the participation of both parties in verbal and non-verbal ways. • The use of “I” statements is imperative.

  9. Make eye contact • Look the speaker in the face most of the time, especially look at his/her eyes • If you forget to make eye contact, speaker may think you are bored, withdrawn, or simply not listening • Be culturally sensitive: some individuals may be uncomfortable with too much direct eye contact

  10. Take a listening position • Sit or stand in a comfortable position • Aim your body in the general direction of the speaker • Try to be relaxed • Be aware of other non-verbals: placement of arms, leaning forward when necessary, head nodding, degree of personal space, smiling

  11. Paraphrase the speaker’s message • State in your own words what someone has just said • Some common ways to lead into paraphrases are: • What I hear you saying is…. • In other words…. • So basically how you felt was… • What happened was… • Sounds like you’re feeling… • The speaker has the chance to make the message more clear if he/she doesn’t think you really understood

  12. Ask clarifying questions • If something the speaker said is unclear, ask him/her a question to get more information • Asking questions make you an active, interested listener • The speaker can tell you have been listening enough to have a question and care enough to ask • Ask open ended questions: • Could you give me an example…

  13. Make comments, ask questions • When the speaker stops or pauses, make comments about the same subject • If you change the topic suddenly, she/he may think you weren’t listening • If the speaker asks a question, your answer can show you were listening • Use silence to your benefit versus attempting to fill the conversation with constant talk

  14. Provide appropriate feedback • Feedback should always be given in an honest and supportive way • Empathy: identify with the speaker’s feelings. It can be difficult if you have different life experiences or would try a different solution • Openness: be a supportive, but neutral listener. Be careful of judgments. • Awareness: be aware of your own biases. We all have them, it’s human nature

  15. Effective Listening: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FTr7mRs1ixg

  16. blocks to listening

  17. The speaker’s control of the message • A two-way flow of information keeps listeners focused and involved • The listener is more involved if he/she can break in from time to time to clarify, check out the message, etc • If the listener is involved, then he/she is more likely to listen well and attentively • Sometimes the speaker’s control of the message is too rigid and this blocks a two-way flow. Ex: lecturing, giving advice, reprimanding

  18. assumptions • Avoid clouding up your listening attention with assumptions about: • What the other person is trying to say • What they really mean • What they want the listener to do, etc • Assumptions are often not accurate • They certainly prevent the listener from focusing on what’s being said • If I’m assuming, I’m not listening

  19. Buzz words • Most people have definite private buzz words which will have a definite emotional charge, sometimes positive, sometimes more negative • When listeners hear their own buzz words, they’re apt to reject or accept the whole message • When the buzz words hits, the listening stops

  20. Silent counter-arguments • Listeners who feel challenged by what they hear may begin formulating their own counter-arguments while the message is still in route • The listener has shifted focus to refuting what the speaker has “mistakenly” said

  21. distractions • Other things in the environment • Things in the listener’s own mind

  22. interruptions • In our haste to share our own ideas, we cut others off • This conveys to the speaker that you do not value what they have to say

  23. Conclusion • It takes a lot of concentration to be an active listener • Be deliberate with your listening • Your goal is truly hear what the other person is saying • Concentrate on the message; do not let your mind wander • Ask questions, reflect, and paraphrase Is anybody listening? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poAUNIQsTJI

  24. References • “How to be a Good Listener” http://www.twu.edu/downloads/counseling/E-8_How_to_be_a_good_listener.pdf • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poAUNIQsTJI • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FTr7mRs1ixg • http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=Az1v_yF_oXs

More Related