Set a quiet sixty‑second timer while someone speaks, resisting the urge to interrupt or prepare your reply. Focus on breath, posture, and key words. When the timer ends, summarize what mattered most to them, not you, and ask one gentle clarifying question.
Set a quiet sixty‑second timer while someone speaks, resisting the urge to interrupt or prepare your reply. Focus on breath, posture, and key words. When the timer ends, summarize what mattered most to them, not you, and ask one gentle clarifying question.
Set a quiet sixty‑second timer while someone speaks, resisting the urge to interrupt or prepare your reply. Focus on breath, posture, and key words. When the timer ends, summarize what mattered most to them, not you, and ask one gentle clarifying question.
Keep a pocket log of three interactions daily. Note the context, one listening move you attempted, and the result. Review every Friday to spot patterns. Celebrate one win publicly, perhaps in a team channel, to normalize listening as a visible, learnable skill.
Choose one drill for the week and announce it to a colleague or friend for accountability. Examples include the sixty‑second pause, keyword capture, or assumption audit. Public commitment multiplies follow‑through and often invites partners who will practice alongside you.
Once a month, trade ten‑minute feedback with a trusted listener. Ask them to rate your presence, clarity, and empathy, sharing one example each. Offer the same in return. Gentle, specific stories foster growth faster than scores alone, and deepen mutual respect.