Episode 26 – The One Skill that can improve your day to day conversation

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Genre – NonFiction – Management, Communication

Book 47/52

Rating – 3/5

Book  – I Hear You: The Surprisingly Simple Skill Behind Extraordinary Relationships

The One Skill that can improve your day to day conversation

A long time ago, one of my friends’ lost her parent. I recall feeling lost watching her navigate the turbulent times. She was miserable and had some dark times – it was difficult for me to watch.

I felt helpless – wanting to help but not knowing how to.

I tried various things in my attempt to make her feel better – until one day she snapped back

And told me – ‘I don’t want you to fix it. I want you to just listen to me’

And that is the incident I remembered now. This is what I should have done instead.

The book I am going to talk about today is I hear you by Michael Sorenson

This is a book that could have been an article. Thankfully it is a very short read.

This teaches you about the power of a very valuable [yet, under-utilized skill] – validation

It talks about how this skill helps improve relationships with your partner, navigate difficult relationships at work, connect at a deeper level with friends and family.

As social creatures we crave acceptance, appreciation and a sense of belonging

Essentially, validation means saying to someone, “I hear you. I get what you’re feeling, and it’s perfectly alright to feel that way’

Effective validation, he says has 2 components

It offers a specific emotion
It offers justification for the feeling

Here is an example he provides

Say your co-worker seems a little distracted. Curious, you ask, whats up.

“Oh…my daughter was supposed to call when she got home from dance practice over an hour ago”, she says, but I haven’t heard back, so I’m a little worries.

What would you say?

Offer reassurance

[Oh, I am sure, she is fine. You know how teenagers are, she probably forgot;}

Offer advice

[You should call her friend]

What is more effective is if you took a moment to validate. And say something on the lines of –

“I don’t blame you for being worried, especially if she said she will call an hour ago..”

Notice how we are [1]  ‘identifying the emotion – worry” and [2] Offer justification [its been an hour….]

So in a nutshell, he recommends a 4 step validation process that one could apply to any situation

Listen empathically
Validate the emotion
Offer advise or encouragement [if appropriate[
Validate the emotion again

It reads like a simplification of the psychologist  John Gottman’s ‘bids for attention’ in a relationship.

Nonetheless, it’s a framework one could definitely adopt to one’s improve how you connect with people around you

Behind the need to communicate is the need to share. Behind the need to share is the need to be understood. – Leo Rosten

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