The Lost Art of Conversaton
Embed from Getty ImagesI spent a few decades doing "stand-up" for kids at school visits. When I first started, I noticed that they listened well enough for me to teach them about the relationship between balance and one's center of gravity. Not an easy concept to grasp. It took more than one sentence. My success depended on a give-and-take oral response from them. It kept them engaged. It also required a lot of thought, rehearsal and energy on my part. And it got harder and harder as the years rolled by because the kids were less and less able to focus. Talking didn't seem to work as well as it used to.
A conversation is a social interaction that depends on listening to what someone says to you, acknowledging that you've heard them, and responding appropriately. In colonial days, before there was professional entertainment wired into your home and accessible at the push of a button, people had to provide their own entertainment. Wealthy young women learned the pianoforte and sang. Dinner parties depended on guests who were amusing and witty raconteurs. People sometimes even retired from the dinner table to engage in "parlor" (from the French word "to speak") games.
Recently a teacher friend put up an intriguing photo of human skin matched to Pantone swatches. She tried to start a conversion about the evolution of human skin color as serving different biological purposes, to no avail. The kids got themselves trapped in making silly remarks.
I've noticed many children don't make eye contact with me in one-on-one conversations. I have to request that they look at me when we're talking. My teenage granddaughter spent a lot of time on her phone texting her girl friends. When I was her age I spent, literally, hours talking with my girls friends on the phone. When I asked her why she communicated by text, "It's easier," was her terse reply. Yes, interacting with a complicated organism, another human being, is an important skill set that starts the moment you're born with smell and touch and eye contact among the most important interactions for a newborn and a parent. Children in orphanages who don't do these things as infants exhibit a "failure to bond" with others as adults.
Technology is teaching us new skills on how to be alone. Last Sunday's NY Times had an article about a man who spent the day with his cat avatar named Sox. It made him feel less lonely. There is a new game out to revive the art of conversation . When I watch news commentary shows with pundits, it's not just the content that interests me, it's the way they interact. They take turns and apologize when they "step on" or interrupt another speaker. The moderator develops skillful segues between speakers. They often cite one another when making a point. No one tries to dominate the discourse. I get very uncomfortable when two opposing commentators scream "talking points" over each other and I turn the show off. I just looked up talk show training on Google and there are more sites than I could count, most of them oriented on how to be a star talk show host. Good talker have the same problem as good writers:You have to have something to say. Content countsYou need to know whom you're talking to. Is this person going to be interested in you?You need to speak so the other person "gets" it. You can tell if that happens by listening carefully to the response.You must make your response acknowledge what the other person has contributed. This may be in the form of asking a question and waiting for an answer.The exchange can be measured by the extent of the back-and-forth. Poor conversations just dwindle away and are forgotten quickly.What have you observed about your own social verbal exchanges? Are you conscious about how you go about entering into a conversation? Do you like to talk to people? Why? or Why not?
Does this post make you want to talk to me? If so, please comment.
A conversation is a social interaction that depends on listening to what someone says to you, acknowledging that you've heard them, and responding appropriately. In colonial days, before there was professional entertainment wired into your home and accessible at the push of a button, people had to provide their own entertainment. Wealthy young women learned the pianoforte and sang. Dinner parties depended on guests who were amusing and witty raconteurs. People sometimes even retired from the dinner table to engage in "parlor" (from the French word "to speak") games.
Recently a teacher friend put up an intriguing photo of human skin matched to Pantone swatches. She tried to start a conversion about the evolution of human skin color as serving different biological purposes, to no avail. The kids got themselves trapped in making silly remarks.
I've noticed many children don't make eye contact with me in one-on-one conversations. I have to request that they look at me when we're talking. My teenage granddaughter spent a lot of time on her phone texting her girl friends. When I was her age I spent, literally, hours talking with my girls friends on the phone. When I asked her why she communicated by text, "It's easier," was her terse reply. Yes, interacting with a complicated organism, another human being, is an important skill set that starts the moment you're born with smell and touch and eye contact among the most important interactions for a newborn and a parent. Children in orphanages who don't do these things as infants exhibit a "failure to bond" with others as adults.
Technology is teaching us new skills on how to be alone. Last Sunday's NY Times had an article about a man who spent the day with his cat avatar named Sox. It made him feel less lonely. There is a new game out to revive the art of conversation . When I watch news commentary shows with pundits, it's not just the content that interests me, it's the way they interact. They take turns and apologize when they "step on" or interrupt another speaker. The moderator develops skillful segues between speakers. They often cite one another when making a point. No one tries to dominate the discourse. I get very uncomfortable when two opposing commentators scream "talking points" over each other and I turn the show off. I just looked up talk show training on Google and there are more sites than I could count, most of them oriented on how to be a star talk show host. Good talker have the same problem as good writers:You have to have something to say. Content countsYou need to know whom you're talking to. Is this person going to be interested in you?You need to speak so the other person "gets" it. You can tell if that happens by listening carefully to the response.You must make your response acknowledge what the other person has contributed. This may be in the form of asking a question and waiting for an answer.The exchange can be measured by the extent of the back-and-forth. Poor conversations just dwindle away and are forgotten quickly.What have you observed about your own social verbal exchanges? Are you conscious about how you go about entering into a conversation? Do you like to talk to people? Why? or Why not?
Does this post make you want to talk to me? If so, please comment.
Published on March 26, 2019 12:10
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