5 ways to listen better | Julian Treasure | TED

4,653,740 views ・ 2011-07-29

TED


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00:15
We are losing our listening.
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We spend roughly 60 percent of our communication time listening,
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but we're not very good at it.
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We retain just 25 percent of what we hear.
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Now -- not you, not this talk,
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but that is generally true.
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(Laughter)
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Let's define listening as making meaning from sound.
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It's a mental process,
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and it's a process of extraction.
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We use some pretty cool techniques to do this.
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One of them is pattern recognition.
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(Crowd noises) So in a cocktail party like this,
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if I say, "David, Sara, pay attention" -- some of you just sat up.
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We recognize patterns to distinguish noise from signal,
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and especially our name.
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Differencing is another technique we use.
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If I left this pink noise on for more than a couple of minutes,
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(Pink noise) you would literally cease to hear it.
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We listen to differences; we discount sounds that remain the same.
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And then there is a whole range of filters.
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These filters take us from all sound
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down to what we pay attention to.
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Most people are entirely unconscious of these filters.
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But they actually create our reality in a way,
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because they tell us what we're paying attention to right now.
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I'll give you one example of that.
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Intention is very important in sound, in listening.
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When I married my wife,
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I promised her I would listen to her every day
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as if for the first time.
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Now that's something I fall short of on a daily basis.
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(Laughter)
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But it's a great intention to have in a relationship.
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(Laughter)
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But that's not all.
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Sound places us in space and in time.
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If you close your eyes right now in this room,
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you're aware of the size of the room
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from the reverberation and the bouncing of the sound off the surfaces;
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you're aware of how many people are around you,
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because of the micro-noises you're receiving.
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And sound places us in time as well,
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because sound always has time embedded in it.
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In fact, I would suggest that our listening is the main way
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that we experience the flow of time
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from past to future.
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So, "Sonority is time and meaning" -- a great quote.
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I said at the beginning, we're losing our listening.
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Why did I say that?
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Well, there are a lot of reasons for this.
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First of all, we invented ways of recording --
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first writing, then audio recording and now video recording as well.
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The premium on accurate and careful listening has simply disappeared.
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Secondly, the world is now so noisy,
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(Noise) with this cacophony going on visually and auditorily,
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it's just hard to listen;
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it's tiring to listen.
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Many people take refuge in headphones,
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but they turn big, public spaces like this,
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shared soundscapes,
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into millions of tiny, little personal sound bubbles.
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In this scenario, nobody's listening to anybody.
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We're becoming impatient.
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We don't want oratory anymore; we want sound bites.
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And the art of conversation is being replaced -- dangerously, I think --
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by personal broadcasting.
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I don't know how much listening there is in this conversation,
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which is sadly very common, especially in the UK.
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We're becoming desensitized.
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Our media have to scream at us with these kinds of headlines
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in order to get our attention.
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And that means it's harder for us to pay attention
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to the quiet, the subtle, the understated.
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This is a serious problem that we're losing our listening.
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This is not trivial,
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because listening is our access to understanding.
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Conscious listening always creates understanding,
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and only without conscious listening
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can these things happen.
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A world where we don't listen to each other at all
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is a very scary place indeed.
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So I'd like to share with you five simple exercises,
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tools you can take away with you,
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to improve your own conscious listening.
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Would you like that?
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Audience: Yes!
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Good. The first one is silence.
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Just three minutes a day of silence is a wonderful exercise
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to reset your ears and to recalibrate,
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so that you can hear the quiet again.
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If you can't get absolute silence,
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go for quiet, that's absolutely fine.
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Second, I call this "the mixer."
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(Noise) So even if you're in a noisy environment like this --
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and we all spend a lot of time in places like this --
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listen in the coffee bar to how many channels of sound can I hear?
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How many individual channels in that mix am I listening to?
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You can do it in a beautiful place as well, like in a lake.
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How many birds am I hearing?
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Where are they? Where are those ripples?
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It's a great exercise for improving the quality of your listening.
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Third, this exercise I call "savoring," and this is a beautiful exercise.
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It's about enjoying mundane sounds.
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This, for example, is my tumble dryer.
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(Dryer)
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It's a waltz -- one, two, three; one, two, three; one, two, three.
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I love it!
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Or just try this one on for size.
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(Coffee grinder)
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Wow!
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So, mundane sounds can be really interesting --
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if you pay attention.
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I call that the "hidden choir" -- it's around us all the time.
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The next exercise is probably the most important of all of these,
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if you just take one thing away.
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This is listening positions --
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the idea that you can move your listening position
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to what's appropriate to what you're listening to.
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This is playing with those filters.
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Remember I gave you those filters?
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It's starting to play with them as levers,
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to get conscious about them and to move to different places.
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These are just some of the listening positions,
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or scales of listening positions, that you can use.
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There are many.
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Have fun with that. It's very exciting.
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And finally, an acronym.
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You can use this in listening, in communication.
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If you're in any one of those roles --
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and I think that probably is everybody who's listening to this talk --
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the acronym is RASA,
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which is the Sanskrit word for "juice" or "essence."
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And RASA stands for "Receive," which means pay attention to the person;
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"Appreciate," making little noises like "hmm," "oh," "OK";
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"Summarize" -- the word "so" is very important in communication;
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and "Ask," ask questions afterwards.
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Now sound is my passion, it's my life.
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I wrote a whole book about it. So I live to listen.
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That's too much to ask for most people.
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But I believe that every human being needs to listen consciously
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in order to live fully --
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connected in space and in time to the physical world around us,
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connected in understanding to each other,
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not to mention spiritually connected,
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because every spiritual path I know of has listening and contemplation
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at its heart.
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That's why we need to teach listening in our schools as a skill.
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Why is it not taught? It's crazy.
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And if we can teach listening in our schools,
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we can take our listening off that slippery slope
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to that dangerous, scary world that I talked about,
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and move it to a place where everybody is consciously listening all the time,
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or at least capable of doing it.
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Now, I don't know how to do that,
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but this is TED,
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and I think the TED community is capable of anything.
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So I invite you to connect with me, connect with each other,
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take this mission out.
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And let's get listening taught in schools,
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and transform the world in one generation
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to a conscious, listening world -- a world of connection,
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a world of understanding
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and a world of peace.
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Thank you for listening to me today.
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(Applause)
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