GOOD
LISTENERS LISTEN WITH THEIR FACES
The first skill
that you can practice to be a good listener is to
act like a good listener. We have spent a lot of our
modern lives working at tuning out all of the information that is
thrust at us. It therefore becomes important to change our physical
body language from that of a deflector to that of a receiver, much
like a satellite dish. Our faces contain most of the receptive equipment
in our bodies, so it is only natural that we should tilt our faces
towards the channel of information.
A second skill
is to use the other bodily receptors besides your ears. You can
be a better listener when you look at the other person.
Your eyes pick up the non-verbal signals that all people send out
when they are speaking. By looking at the speaker, your eyes will
also complete the eye contact that speakers are trying to make.
A speaker will work harder at sending out the information when they
see a receptive audience in attendance. Your eyes help complete
the communication circuit that must be established between speaker
and listener.
When you have
established eye and face contact with your speaker, you must then
react to the speaker by sending out non-verbal signals. Your face
must move and give the range of emotions that indicate whether you
are following what the speaker has to say. By moving your face to
the information, you can better concentrate on what the person is
saying. Your face must become an active and contoured catcher of
information.
It is extremely
difficult to receive information when your mouth is moving information
out at the same time. A good listener will stop talking
and use receptive language instead. Use the I see . . . un hunh
. . . oh really words and phrases that follow and encourage your
speaker's train of thought. This forces you to react to the ideas
presented, rather than the person. You can then move to asking questions,
instead of giving your opinion on the information being presented.
It is a true listening skill to use your mouth as a moving receptor
of information rather than a broadcaster.
A final skill
is to move your mind to concentrate on what the speaker is saying.
You cannot fully hear their point of view or process information
when you argue mentally or judge what they are saying before they
have completed. An open mind is a mind that is receiving and listening
to information.
If you really
want to listen, you will act like a good listener.
Good listeners are good catchers because they give
their speakers a target and then move that target to capture the
information that is being sent. When good listeners
aren't understanding their speakers, they will send signals to the
speaker about what they expect next, or how the speaker can change
the speed of information delivery to suit the listener.
Above all, a good listener involves all of their face
to be an active moving listener.
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