The International Listening Association,
cited by Hybels and Weaver (2001:64), defines listening as “the process of
receiving, constructing meaning from, and responding to spoken and/or
non-verbal messages”. Listening goes beyond being an important communication
skill, it is a way of life. Most of our conscious and unconscious communication
efforts are geared toward listening. A research reveals that listening takes
53% of our communication activities, reading 17%, while speaking and writing
constitute 16% and 14% respectively (Hybels and Weaver, 2001:70).
However, this statistics
notwithstanding, it is rather pathetic that most people have a poor listening
habit. They listen without really listening. Lamenting on this anomaly, Benson
(undated:155) says:
The art of
listening is an essential but oft overlooked element of good communication.
Genuine listening has become one of the endangered species. God gave each of us
two ears and one mouth – perhaps he intended that we use them proportionally.
The tendency common to most people is to
egospeak, a term which communication experts coined to describe people’s desire
to listen to themselves more than anyone else:
Egospeak
is thinking of what you’re going to say next while another person is trying to
talk to you. Jumping in before, or on,
the other person’s last word. Constantly trying to top the other person’s story
(Benson, undated:155).
In similar
vein, Beck et al (2002:12) distinguish between hearing (which is what most
people really do) and listening. They note that:
It is useful to make a distinction
between hearing and listening. Most
people can hear, in that they can receive and distinguish sound within a
specific frequency range. Hearing, however, is a passive activity. It is
something that happens to us, rather than something that we do. On the other hand, listening is active…
‘People hear but do not listen’. In a class or lecture it is very likely you
will hear the words being spoken. You may not necessarily listen to them.
With this background on listening, let
us now proceed to see how it can be utilized for personal development at
different levels.
Listening for
Mental and Emotional Development
A good listening habit is one of the
indications of good breeding. Since the mental faculty, the Central Processing
Unit (CPU) of the body can only retain and process the message or information
inputted into it - as well as be enriched by it – it behoves every individual
to cultivate a good listening habit by:
§ Paying attention
and showing interest in the message being transmitted
§ Indicate to the
speaker if he is understanding the message or not, and
§ Showing how he
is reacting to the message by non-verbal cues (Beck et al, 2002).
The first way to use the listening skill
to enhance your mental faculty and ensure a wholesome being is by being
selective about what you listen to.
There is no better way to keep your mind healthy than to choose what you
listen to. Knowledge is the food of the soul, just as the body thrives on
viands and adornments. However, it is
not all the information that one is exposed to that he should listen
to, for as the saying goes, ‘garbage in, garbage out’. What you feed your brain is what you will
express in speech or behaviour.
So, the first rule for using listening
to achieve mental and emotional development is to choose what you listen
to. Platitudes and other forms of
debased communication do nothing good to the soul. They must therefore not be entertained,
otherwise, the mind will process them, deposit them in the mental and emotion
realm, and the man will live them eventually.
Capturing this phenomenon in another
words, Allen (1902:4-5), in his timeless classic, says:
‘Men themselves
are makers of themselves’ by virtue of the thoughts which they choose and
encourage…(The) mind is the master weaver, both of the inner garment of
character and the outer garment of circumstance...
As the plant
springs from, and could not be without, the seed, so every act of man springs
from the hidden seeds of thought, and could not have appeared without them.
This applies equally to those acts called “spontaneous” and “unpremeditated” as
to those which are deliberately executed
Another way to enhance your mental and
emotional capacity through listening is by attending seminars, lectures,
workshops, conferences, and other intellect-simulating fora. By so doing, you
will continually cultivate your mind, widen your horizon, and school your
emotion, which is at best erratic.