Want to know how to be a better listener in a relationship?
If youâve ever heard your partner say:
âYouâre not listening to me. You donât understand me,â
Then you know how painful it is when you canât connect with your partner.
If your spouse says you arenât listening â it hurts. Even if you are trying your best to hear and understand, if you canât get this right, itâll be impossible to have unity, harmony, and love.
Learning how to be a good listener in a relationship can be the difference between fighting and intimacy. In this article, Iâll show you the three essential components of being an amazing listener. Once you get these steps down, youâll begin receiving positive feedback, and your relationship will change.
Table of Contents
How to be a better listener in a relationship comes down to these three keys
- Learning how to feel what your partner is sharing (entering their world).
- Giving âactive listeningâ cues that let your partner you are there with them.
- Knowing how to hold yourself while someone shares their opinion, criticism, or perspective.
As you may have noticed, the process doesnât start with actions. While most teachings on active listening focus on the outward actions of âactive listening,â I donât think that works.
Contrary to what most counselors, books, or teachers will teach you â active listening isnât just about saying this, then that, and then this. If that worked, we could program robots to listen to us, and we would all feel heard.
In my work in the nationâs largest research program on marital success, Iâve learned that great listening is a combination of âstepsâ and âfeeling.â The emphasis here is, feeling.
Once you learn how to feel your partner, to connect with your partner, the steps will be very easy.
Before I give you the how-to of great listening, let me first tell you what not to do.
What NOT TO DO to be a great listener
With a little fear of sounding biased or sexist, Iâd like to give men one key piece of advice.
âIf you want to be a great listener â
donât jump right into giving advice.â
Even if the temptation is strong, hold back from giving advice unless itâs asked.
While this suggestion fits all genders, research shows that men are more focused on solutions, and women tend to focus on confirmation and connection. That being said, both men and women enjoy conversations where understanding is at the forefront.
While I could give a lengthy list of what not to do for great listening, let me just share one more piece of advice.
To be a great listener, donât interrupt.
While both genders can improve their listening by cutting each other off less, the research is clear: men interrupt women more often. That being said, whether youâre a man or woman If you are listening, stay quiet. Or, to say this another way:
âGod gave you two ears and one mouth for a reason. â
Genders aside, all my studies and work as a relationship coach for 13 years have taught me that everyone likes to be listened to in pretty much the same way.
How To Be A Great Listener: Learn How To Feel What She Says
If you want to be a great listener, you need to learn to feel your partner.
I canât stress this step enough.
Great listening comes down to one thing:
Our ability to connect and feel the other person.
While Iâll teach you the proven actions of great listening â none of that matters if the feeling isnât there. Without the feeling element, listening could be successfully done by a robot.
To bring this home a bit more, Iâd like for you to consider a time you felt really understood. If you think about that moment, itâs likely you had a sense of âbeing gotten.â And if you think about any moment when you were really heard, itâs likely you would say: âI felt really understood.â
Great listening is a process, but even more importantly, itâs about a feeling. With the steps below, you can learn how to give your partner that sensation of being really understood.
Learning how to âget your partnerâ doesnât have to be complicated. As a matter of fact, itâs a lot simpler than most people make it.
Here is how to feel what your partner feels, all so you become a great listener
For a moment, I want you to imagine being your partner.
Iâd like for you to put on your partnerâs filter. Get into your partnerâs world for a moment.
When I say filter, I mean the sense through which your partner feels, senses, sees, and hears the world. As you can imagine, the lens through which your partner experiences is very different than your own.
When you start to consider the major differences, it can begin to enhance your ability to feel and see what your partner does.
To take on the filter of your partner, here is something you can do.
For a moment, I want you to imagine being your partner and asking yourself:
- What itâs like to be your other half when you wake up?
- How is it changing your gender, ethnicity, or worldview as your partner?
- When you are your partner, is the world changed somehow?
- Does experience and the filter affect how you receive and experience others?
As you read these next few lines, Iâd like to invite you to consider how the different filter of your partner affects his/her experience of you. To help you do that, I want you to reflect on a recent time your partner told you he/she didnât feel heard. Go back into that moment and see if you can begin to see yourself from your partnerâs point of view.
What did your partner feel when they shared? What did your partner see was happening?
Really dig in and imagine the world as if you were your boyfriend, girlfriend, or spouse.
The more you can bring the sensations of being your other half â the more you will be able to really hear what is being shared.
Being a great listener is about empathizing, and empathy is about being able to feel what is happening to your partner.
Putting yourself in someone elseâs shoes in this kind of way will dramatically transform your ability to be a great listener. The more your listening will reach your partner. The more you are able to feel what itâs like to be the other person, the deeper your words will touch.
Once you step into the experience of someone else, the easier it will be to say:
âI know how you feel. I hear you.â
And the more âin your bodyâ that feeling is for you â the more your partner will relax and feel heard. By putting yourself in the experience of your partner, the more you will become a great listener.
Now, before we move on to the next step, I want you to notice a few things.
- I never said give advice.
- I didnât suggest that you try to fix the problem.
- Not once did I mention that you need to resolve the issue.
To be a great listener, we always start with feeling the experience of our partner.
Now that youâve read this far, youâre ready for the next pieces of how to be a great listener in a relationship.
How To Be A Great Listener: Use These Words
Right now, Iâd like to teach you an incredibly powerful process for responding. This is what counselors and therapists pay thousands of dollars to learn.
Now, before I teach you the magic phrases, I need to stress something. Without a strong sense of feeling what your partner feels, these phrases will potentially be flat and without their power.
If you can tune into your partnerâs experience and you deeply feel their words â these phrases will dissipate their emotions of anger, frustration, or revenge. And if you can follow this process all the way through to its conclusion, you can even reach a place of calmness and connection together.
First, we begin with some key phrases, I encourage you to save these somewhere (or commit them to memory).
After the phrases, you will still need to do a little work. If youâve done my first suggestion, itâll be easy to nail the steps here.
The magic phrases for great listeners
âI hear youâ
âI understand youâ
âI see why you feel that wayâ
âIt makes sense that youâre feeling that way.â
Those are the magical phrases that Iâve used with over one thousand clients. Those are the phrases that I use with my wife, my son, my family, and anyone else who ever needs my heartfelt listening.
If you want to be a great listener, commit yourself to memorizing these phrases.
âI hear youâ
âI understand youâ
âI see why you feel that wayâ
âIt makes sense that youâre feeling that way.â
These words chained together disarm a person. They render the fight or flight energy from combat to a place of emotional safety.
Now, these words alone can do wonders, but to really become a great listener, there is another step.
This set of words can make the novice listener get close to reaching mastery, but there is one more step if you want to be a great listener in your relationship.
How To Be A Great Listener: Master Words Of Feeling
The landscape of people is rooted in emotions.
Our bodies are designed to feel, sense, and experience. No matter how rational you think someone is, they are still emotional creatures. This means that great listening gets fine-tuned by our own ability to feel and convey feeling with our words.
To help you become more attuned to the world of emotions. To help you improve your sense of feelings, try reading these words.
Admiration
Adoration
Anxious
Appreciation
Amusement
Anxiety
Awe
Awkwardness
Boredom
Calmness
Confusion
Craving
Disgust
Pain
Envy
Excitement
Fear
Horror
Interest
Joy
Nostalgia
Sadness
Satisfaction
Sexual desire
Sympathy
Triumph
Numb
Confused
Shutdown
Uneasy
Embarrassed
Worried
Engaged
Lonely
Upset
Abandoned
By enhancing your emotional vocabulary, the more your ability to empathize will improve. In turn, this will improve your ability to connect and listen to your partner too.
Being A Great Listener Improves Your Relationship
Keeping a healthy, robust, and loving marriage is vital to your happiness. As research shows, divorce drops a personâs wealth, their health, and for men (especially), divorce has many negative side effects. In my experience, couples who canât listen to each other are more likely to get divorced, and theyâre more likely to be unhappy in their relationship.
If we donât improve our ability to listen, we are more likely to be unhappy in our relationship. Not only that, we are more likely to experience these negative side effects:
- Short tempers & short fuses
- Distance & disconnection
- More frequent fights
- Disappointment when your partner hurts you
- Emotional shutdowns (stonewalling)
- Big blowouts
- Big, drawn-out talks that donât go anywhere
- Emotional outbursts that cause overwhelm
- Repetitive relationship problems that donât get resolvedÂ
Itâs likely that most of those repetitive issues that couples experience come down to this one issue: both partners not feeling heard.
On the other hand, when we become better listeners, we are more likely to have a great connection. And if you are a great listener, itâs more likely you will feel happier in your relationship. This, in turn, can have these positive side-effects (these stats are for married couples, but even unmarried couples experience these positives):
Increased sense of overall happiness (Marketwatch)
Financial abundance (Ohio University Research shows married people have 93% more wealth)
Longevity and lifespan (WebMD)
Feeling healthier and health issues than single counterparts (NCBI cited study)
More productivity at work (yes, a great relationship makes you better at work, Chicago Tribune).
Getting your daily quote of touch, intimacy, and social connection
Less added weight for women (compared to women in unhappy marriages, APA Journal).
Before you go anywhere, answer this question in the comments. What helps you feel heard?
0 Comments