Celeste Headlee: 10 ways to have a better conversation | TED

14,691,655 views ・ 2016-03-08

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
All right, I want to see a show of hands:
0
12840
1953
00:14
how many of you have unfriended someone on Facebook
1
14817
2399
00:17
because they said something offensive about politics or religion,
2
17240
3856
00:21
childcare, food?
3
21120
2136
00:23
(Laughter)
4
23280
1936
00:25
And how many of you know at least one person that you avoid
5
25240
2816
00:28
because you just don't want to talk to them?
6
28079
2281
00:30
(Laughter)
7
30880
2056
00:32
You know, it used to be that in order to have a polite conversation,
8
32960
3216
00:36
we just had to follow the advice of Henry Higgins in "My Fair Lady":
9
36200
3216
00:39
Stick to the weather and your health.
10
39440
1816
00:41
But these days, with climate change and anti-vaxxing, those subjects --
11
41280
3376
00:44
(Laughter)
12
44680
1296
00:46
are not safe either.
13
46000
1296
00:47
So this world that we live in,
14
47320
2440
00:50
this world in which every conversation
15
50520
2576
00:53
has the potential to devolve into an argument,
16
53120
2176
00:55
where our politicians can't speak to one another
17
55320
2286
00:57
and where even the most trivial of issues
18
57630
2306
00:59
have someone fighting both passionately for it and against it, it's not normal.
19
59960
4976
01:04
Pew Research did a study of 10,000 American adults,
20
64960
3096
01:08
and they found that at this moment, we are more polarized,
21
68080
2736
01:10
we are more divided,
22
70840
1296
01:12
than we ever have been in history.
23
72160
2776
01:14
We're less likely to compromise,
24
74960
1576
01:16
which means we're not listening to each other.
25
76560
2176
01:18
And we make decisions about where to live,
26
78760
2536
01:21
who to marry and even who our friends are going to be,
27
81320
2616
01:23
based on what we already believe.
28
83960
2096
01:26
Again, that means we're not listening to each other.
29
86080
2976
01:29
A conversation requires a balance between talking and listening,
30
89080
3336
01:32
and somewhere along the way, we lost that balance.
31
92440
2656
01:35
Now, part of that is due to technology.
32
95120
1896
01:37
The smartphones that you all either have in your hands
33
97040
2576
01:39
or close enough that you could grab them really quickly.
34
99640
2656
01:42
According to Pew Research,
35
102320
1296
01:43
about a third of American teenagers send more than a hundred texts a day.
36
103640
4896
01:48
And many of them, almost most of them, are more likely to text their friends
37
108560
4576
01:53
than they are to talk to them face to face.
38
113160
2080
01:56
There's this great piece in The Atlantic.
39
116160
1976
01:58
It was written by a high school teacher named Paul Barnwell.
40
118160
2856
02:01
And he gave his kids a communication project.
41
121040
2136
02:03
He wanted to teach them how to speak on a specific subject without using notes.
42
123200
3736
02:06
And he said this: "I came to realize..."
43
126960
1905
02:08
(Laughter)
44
128889
3287
02:12
"I came to realize that conversational competence
45
132200
3176
02:15
might be the single most overlooked skill we fail to teach.
46
135400
4096
02:19
Kids spend hours each day engaging with ideas and each other through screens,
47
139520
4296
02:23
but rarely do they have an opportunity
48
143840
1856
02:25
to hone their interpersonal communications skills.
49
145720
2576
02:28
It might sound like a funny question, but we have to ask ourselves:
50
148320
3176
02:31
Is there any 21st-century skill
51
151520
1936
02:33
more important than being able to sustain coherent, confident conversation?"
52
153480
5576
02:39
Now, I make my living talking to people:
53
159080
2216
02:41
Nobel Prize winners, truck drivers,
54
161320
2256
02:43
billionaires, kindergarten teachers,
55
163600
2416
02:46
heads of state, plumbers.
56
166040
2696
02:48
I talk to people that I like. I talk to people that I don't like.
57
168760
3048
02:51
I talk to some people that I disagree with deeply on a personal level.
58
171832
3784
02:55
But I still have a great conversation with them.
59
175640
2776
02:58
So I'd like to spend the next 10 minutes or so teaching you how to talk
60
178440
3896
03:02
and how to listen.
61
182360
1360
03:04
Many of you have already heard a lot of advice on this,
62
184800
2616
03:07
things like look the person in the eye,
63
187440
1976
03:09
think of interesting topics to discuss in advance,
64
189440
3816
03:13
look, nod and smile to show that you're paying attention,
65
193280
4776
03:18
repeat back what you just heard or summarize it.
66
198080
2896
03:21
So I want you to forget all of that.
67
201000
1736
03:22
It is crap.
68
202760
1216
03:24
(Laughter)
69
204000
3016
03:27
There is no reason to learn how to show you're paying attention
70
207040
4256
03:31
if you are in fact paying attention.
71
211320
3656
03:35
(Laughter)
72
215000
1856
03:36
(Applause)
73
216880
2896
03:39
Now, I actually use the exact same skills as a professional interviewer
74
219800
3656
03:43
that I do in regular life.
75
223480
2936
03:46
So, I'm going to teach you how to interview people,
76
226440
3456
03:49
and that's actually going to help you learn how to be better conversationalists.
77
229920
3816
03:53
Learn to have a conversation
78
233760
1376
03:55
without wasting your time, without getting bored,
79
235160
2336
03:57
and, please God, without offending anybody.
80
237520
3296
04:00
We've all had really great conversations.
81
240840
2216
04:03
We've had them before. We know what it's like.
82
243080
2176
04:05
The kind of conversation where you walk away feeling engaged and inspired,
83
245280
3696
04:09
or where you feel like you've made a real connection
84
249000
2456
04:11
or you've been perfectly understood.
85
251480
2096
04:13
There is no reason
86
253600
1216
04:14
why most of your interactions can't be like that.
87
254840
3256
04:18
So I have 10 basic rules. I'm going to walk you through all of them,
88
258120
3216
04:21
but honestly, if you just choose one of them and master it,
89
261360
3736
04:25
you'll already enjoy better conversations.
90
265120
2736
04:27
Number one: Don't multitask.
91
267880
2216
04:30
And I don't mean just set down your cell phone
92
270120
2176
04:32
or your tablet or your car keys or whatever is in your hand.
93
272320
2856
04:35
I mean, be present.
94
275200
1896
04:37
Be in that moment.
95
277120
2256
04:39
Don't think about your argument you had with your boss.
96
279400
2616
04:42
Don't think about what you're going to have for dinner.
97
282040
2616
04:44
If you want to get out of the conversation,
98
284680
2056
04:46
get out of the conversation,
99
286760
1376
04:48
but don't be half in it and half out of it.
100
288160
2136
04:50
Number two: Don't pontificate.
101
290320
2576
04:52
If you want to state your opinion
102
292920
2176
04:55
without any opportunity for response or argument or pushback or growth,
103
295120
5936
05:01
write a blog.
104
301080
1456
05:02
(Laughter)
105
302560
3056
05:05
Now, there's a really good reason why I don't allow pundits on my show:
106
305640
3376
05:09
Because they're really boring.
107
309040
1776
05:10
If they're conservative, they're going to hate Obama and food stamps and abortion.
108
310840
3858
05:14
If they're liberal, they're going to hate
109
314722
1974
05:16
big banks and oil corporations and Dick Cheney.
110
316720
2216
05:18
Totally predictable.
111
318960
1256
05:20
And you don't want to be like that.
112
320240
1696
05:21
You need to enter every conversation assuming that you have something to learn.
113
321960
5536
05:27
The famed therapist M. Scott Peck said
114
327520
2136
05:29
that true listening requires a setting aside of oneself.
115
329680
4416
05:34
And sometimes that means setting aside your personal opinion.
116
334120
3320
05:38
He said that sensing this acceptance,
117
338200
3296
05:41
the speaker will become less and less vulnerable
118
341520
2256
05:43
and more and more likely to open up the inner recesses
119
343800
2856
05:46
of his or her mind to the listener.
120
346680
2656
05:49
Again, assume that you have something to learn.
121
349360
2760
05:52
Bill Nye: "Everyone you will ever meet knows something that you don't."
122
352880
3680
05:57
I put it this way:
123
357240
1336
05:58
Everybody is an expert in something.
124
358600
3160
06:03
Number three: Use open-ended questions.
125
363160
2816
06:06
In this case, take a cue from journalists.
126
366000
2056
06:08
Start your questions with who, what, when, where, why or how.
127
368080
3096
06:11
If you put in a complicated question, you're going to get a simple answer out.
128
371200
3696
06:14
If I ask you, "Were you terrified?"
129
374920
2336
06:17
you're going to respond to the most powerful word in that sentence,
130
377280
3176
06:20
which is "terrified," and the answer is "Yes, I was" or "No, I wasn't."
131
380480
3336
06:23
"Were you angry?" "Yes, I was very angry."
132
383840
2000
06:25
Let them describe it. They're the ones that know.
133
385864
3072
06:28
Try asking them things like, "What was that like?"
134
388960
2976
06:31
"How did that feel?"
135
391960
1456
06:33
Because then they might have to stop for a moment and think about it,
136
393440
4296
06:37
and you're going to get a much more interesting response.
137
397760
2976
06:40
Number four: Go with the flow.
138
400760
2320
06:43
That means thoughts will come into your mind
139
403720
2816
06:46
and you need to let them go out of your mind.
140
406560
3056
06:49
We've heard interviews often
141
409640
1976
06:51
in which a guest is talking for several minutes
142
411640
2456
06:54
and then the host comes back in and asks a question
143
414120
2416
06:56
which seems like it comes out of nowhere, or it's already been answered.
144
416560
3416
07:00
That means the host probably stopped listening two minutes ago
145
420000
2936
07:02
because he thought of this really clever question,
146
422960
3416
07:06
and he was just bound and determined to say that.
147
426400
3016
07:09
And we do the exact same thing.
148
429440
1976
07:11
We're sitting there having a conversation with someone,
149
431440
2616
07:14
and then we remember that time that we met Hugh Jackman in a coffee shop.
150
434080
3456
07:17
(Laughter)
151
437560
1336
07:18
And we stop listening.
152
438920
1616
07:20
Stories and ideas are going to come to you.
153
440560
2056
07:22
You need to let them come and let them go.
154
442640
2880
07:26
Number five: If you don't know, say that you don't know.
155
446080
3720
07:30
Now, people on the radio, especially on NPR,
156
450800
2296
07:33
are much more aware that they're going on the record,
157
453120
2936
07:36
and so they're more careful about what they claim to be an expert in
158
456080
3576
07:39
and what they claim to know for sure.
159
459680
2136
07:41
Do that. Err on the side of caution.
160
461840
2376
07:44
Talk should not be cheap.
161
464240
1760
07:46
Number six: Don't equate your experience with theirs.
162
466640
3680
07:51
If they're talking about having lost a family member,
163
471280
2776
07:54
don't start talking about the time you lost a family member.
164
474080
2856
07:56
If they're talking about the trouble they're having at work,
165
476960
2856
07:59
don't tell them about how much you hate your job.
166
479840
2336
08:02
It's not the same. It is never the same.
167
482200
1936
08:04
All experiences are individual.
168
484160
1776
08:05
And, more importantly, it is not about you.
169
485960
2680
08:09
You don't need to take that moment to prove how amazing you are
170
489120
3896
08:13
or how much you've suffered.
171
493040
1400
08:15
Somebody asked Stephen Hawking once what his IQ was, and he said,
172
495120
3056
08:18
"I have no idea. People who brag about their IQs are losers."
173
498200
2880
08:21
(Laughter)
174
501120
1936
08:23
Conversations are not a promotional opportunity.
175
503080
3360
08:28
Number seven:
176
508560
1240
08:31
Try not to repeat yourself.
177
511440
1376
08:32
It's condescending, and it's really boring,
178
512840
2376
08:35
and we tend to do it a lot.
179
515240
1656
08:36
Especially in work conversations or in conversations with our kids,
180
516920
3936
08:40
we have a point to make,
181
520880
1256
08:42
so we just keep rephrasing it over and over.
182
522160
2399
08:45
Don't do that.
183
525640
1216
08:46
Number eight: Stay out of the weeds.
184
526880
2296
08:49
Frankly, people don't care
185
529200
2815
08:52
about the years, the names,
186
532039
2616
08:54
the dates, all those details
187
534679
1937
08:56
that you're struggling to come up with in your mind.
188
536640
2456
08:59
They don't care. What they care about is you.
189
539120
2200
09:01
They care about what you're like,
190
541880
1600
09:04
what you have in common.
191
544080
1696
09:05
So forget the details. Leave them out.
192
545800
2640
09:08
Number nine:
193
548880
1216
09:10
This is not the last one, but it is the most important one.
194
550120
3256
09:13
Listen.
195
553400
1200
09:14
I cannot tell you how many really important people have said
196
554960
3416
09:18
that listening is perhaps the most, the number one most important skill
197
558400
3896
09:22
that you could develop.
198
562320
1216
09:23
Buddha said, and I'm paraphrasing,
199
563560
1896
09:25
"If your mouth is open, you're not learning."
200
565480
2536
09:28
And Calvin Coolidge said, "No man ever listened his way out of a job."
201
568040
4280
09:32
(Laughter)
202
572680
1456
09:34
Why do we not listen to each other?
203
574160
2200
09:36
Number one, we'd rather talk.
204
576920
1960
09:39
When I'm talking, I'm in control.
205
579480
1816
09:41
I don't have to hear anything I'm not interested in.
206
581320
2456
09:43
I'm the center of attention.
207
583800
1376
09:45
I can bolster my own identity.
208
585200
1896
09:47
But there's another reason:
209
587120
1376
09:48
We get distracted.
210
588520
1456
09:50
The average person talks at about 225 word per minute,
211
590000
3536
09:53
but we can listen at up to 500 words per minute.
212
593560
4296
09:57
So our minds are filling in those other 275 words.
213
597880
3976
10:01
And look, I know, it takes effort and energy
214
601880
3176
10:05
to actually pay attention to someone,
215
605080
2296
10:07
but if you can't do that, you're not in a conversation.
216
607400
2976
10:10
You're just two people shouting out barely related sentences
217
610400
2856
10:13
in the same place.
218
613280
1256
10:14
(Laughter)
219
614560
1896
10:16
You have to listen to one another.
220
616480
2496
10:19
Stephen Covey said it very beautifully.
221
619000
1896
10:20
He said, "Most of us don't listen with the intent to understand.
222
620920
3936
10:24
We listen with the intent to reply."
223
624880
2680
10:28
One more rule, number 10, and it's this one: Be brief.
224
628960
3856
10:32
[A good conversation is like a miniskirt; short enough to retain interest,
225
632840
3496
10:36
but long enough to cover the subject. -- My Sister]
226
636360
2416
10:38
(Laughter)
227
638800
1216
10:40
(Applause)
228
640040
2416
10:42
All of this boils down to the same basic concept, and it is this one:
229
642480
4320
10:47
Be interested in other people.
230
647320
2856
10:50
You know, I grew up with a very famous grandfather,
231
650200
2416
10:52
and there was kind of a ritual in my home.
232
652640
2056
10:54
People would come over to talk to my grandparents,
233
654720
2456
10:57
and after they would leave, my mother would come over to us,
234
657200
2856
11:00
and she'd say, "Do you know who that was?
235
660080
1976
11:02
She was the runner-up to Miss America.
236
662080
1856
11:03
He was the mayor of Sacramento.
237
663960
1696
11:05
She won a Pulitzer Prize. He's a Russian ballet dancer."
238
665680
3176
11:08
And I kind of grew up assuming
239
668880
3376
11:12
everyone has some hidden, amazing thing about them.
240
672280
2760
11:15
And honestly, I think it's what makes me a better host.
241
675680
2880
11:19
I keep my mouth shut as often as I possibly can,
242
679280
2816
11:22
I keep my mind open,
243
682120
1416
11:23
and I'm always prepared to be amazed,
244
683560
2496
11:26
and I'm never disappointed.
245
686080
1960
11:28
You do the same thing.
246
688760
1856
11:30
Go out, talk to people,
247
690640
2416
11:33
listen to people,
248
693080
1216
11:34
and, most importantly, be prepared to be amazed.
249
694320
3480
11:38
Thanks.
250
698440
1216
11:39
(Applause)
251
699680
3280
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7