Showing posts with label communication. Show all posts
Showing posts with label communication. Show all posts

Friday, November 16, 2007

Hearing Loss - Successful Communication

Communication between two people works best when the hearer can put aside any personal feelings about the talker or the subject and simply listens to let the conversation to flux back and forth. Emotions brought up by the back-and-forth flowing conversation can be warm feelings of friendly relationship or baffled misunderstanding of what is being said. The smooth fluent of a two-way conversation is broken when the hearer can't hear what the talker is saying. The hearer is left out of the conversation and by going into his "head" to fill up in missing words he is no longer listening to the speaker. When the hearer is able to hear the talker comfortably then he is able to just sit down back and listen. He is now relaxed and unfastened to hearing what the talker have to say. By being relaxed, the hearer can bury about working at apprehension and comprehending what the talker is saying and simply listens and basks the conversation. As you have got begun to learn, "listening" is more than than just hearing the words. You can also experience the significance from the speaker. You can understand the "gist" of what talker is trying to say, even if he doesn't talk the right words. That is the ideal "listening" situation! Sometimes, we are so busy "assuming" or "guessing" at what person is going to state next, that we lose the most of import portion of communication. By active hearing in a relaxed manner, we are able to "hear" "between the lines" much more than effectively and go better listeners. It is not "what" person states that we necessitate to hear, but sometimes it is the "how" person states we necessitate to hear. Communication is not just what we hear in a conversation, but how we experience in a conversation. Our emotions are a mirror that the talker utilizes to exemplify a point. Remember a clip when person was telling you something sad. You heard the words but you also felt the emotions. How did that happen? You heard them state something that made them sad, but you also felt their emotions. This is a deeper sense of hearing than just hearing the words. Can you see the difference? Listening with our ears is just a portion of communicating while emotions add a immense portion in apprehension the impact behind the words. That is what speechreading is. You watch the speaker, hear and listen to his words, and by observing his organic structure language, experience the emotion behind the words. Are they telling you something that you necessitate to know? Are they giving you ways to acquire to the restaurant? Are they sharing with you how they felt when they won the contest? You can easily see what a critical function emotions play in speechreading.

Successful communicating happens when both the talker and the hearer range an understanding that they are being heard and understood. Can you believe of a clip when person was speaking and you couldn't hear them so you didn't understand what was being said? It doesn't experience too good, makes it? Solutions in this type of state of affairs would be to change your seats location to be near to the speaker, inquire the talker to stand up still and not travel around the room, inquire the talker to talk up and talk a small slower. Depending on the circumstances, most talkers would be most eager to comply. Are you even interested in what is being said? If you are, then you will make your best to guarantee that you can hear. If you are not interested in the topic being discussed, then you consciously take yourself "out of the loop". If you care about the talker and his feelings, make your best to affect yourself in being able to hear and understand what he is saying. In the long run, you will be glad that you did!

To be a good listener:

• Tune out distractions and focusing on the speaker;

• Be certain that the visible light is shining on the talker and not in your eyes;

• Concentrate on the what the talker is saying rather than thought about what you desire to say;

• Don't interrupt, don't presume or leap into decisions about what you have got heard. If you are uncertain what you heard, inquire that the message be repeated;

• Become attuned to the speaker's tone of voice of voice. When I watch a film where one of the histrions have an accent, I listen carefully. At first Iodine may lose what was said, but after a short time, my encephalon larns to understand the speech pattern for the remainder of the movie. Our encephalons are pretty amazing!