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LEARNING TO
LISTEN

For
a number of years the late Mortimer Adler was Chairman of
the Board of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, In an hour-long
interview with Mr. Adler in his Chicago office back in the
1980s, author Hal Gieseking asked him about the secrets of
listening to others. Here is the author's description of
that conversation.
"How can you make people listen to you when you talk with
them? How can you learn to listen to what they want to tell
you?.
Mortimer Adler: "If someone says to you, ‘Shall I tell you
why I love you?' or ‘We're thinking of promoting you to Vice
President,' you stop daydreaming and really listen to what
that person has to say.
"If you can bring even a small degree of that intense
motivation to other conversations and meetings, all other
rules about how to listen become secondary."
I really listened to Mortimer Adler. My motivation: I had to
write an article about the art of listening that was due in
about twenty-four hours. He stressed that to participate in
good conversations or meetings, you must learn to be a good
listener, and it's much harder than most people think.
Here are four Adler rules for listening well.
1. Listening is not a passive activity. Unless your mind is
involved as well as your ear, you aren't really hearing the
other person.
2. Listen for key words and ideas. Reach out and catch what
is in the mind of the speaker – just as the catcher in a
baseball game sometimes has to reach out for the ball the
pitcher has just thrown.
3. Don't be distracted by how the person speaks or unusual
mannerisms. Try to understand what the speaker's intentions
are. What is he or she trying to communicate to you?
4. There's one easy thing you can do when you are not sure
if you understand what the other person is trying to tell
you. You can say, "Did I understand you to say –" Now put
what you think the person has said in your own words. If the
speaker agrees you've stated the point correctly, now you
are free to agree or disagree. To agree before you
understand what the other person has said is inane. To
disagree before you understand is impertinent.
At the end of our conversation, Mr. Adler with a somewhat
mischievous look, asked, "Now can you tell me what I just
told you?"
Thanks to a blessing of a tape recorder, I could.
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