Are you a conversational drive-by shooter?
When was the last time a situation or a conversation got really hard, and rather than turn away from it, you pressed into it?
Asking questions doesn’t have to feel like an interrogation
4 strategies to help you approach asking questions in a way that encourages open dialogue.
Are you trauma-dumping on others?
In our quest to be more real and expose more people to the fullness of our stories, this push can go too far.
Own who you are and what you know
Self-disqualifying language undermines the makeup of who you are and what you know, and I’d love to see more of us own our experiences, perspectives, and expertise.
Who cares what anyone else thinks?
It is important to point out just how much of a conversational crutch this saying (and others like it) becomes when things start to get uncomfortable.
You get to choose how you show up
You get to choose whether to be on guard and on the defensive, or, to be willing and open to taking in new information that might...just maybe...shift your thinking and how you show up in the world.
The most meaningful things I read in 2023
8 takeaways from books I read in 2023 from authors I had the privilege of interviewing on my show, The Follow-Up Question.
Keep your emotions in check? How about: Check in with your emotions.
Just as you feel every bit of nuance and detail and complexity of the emotions you experience, you need more intricate and accurate ways to describe those emotions to others to give them a greater picture of exactly what you are feeling.
The scary part of communication
We often conflate being a good communicator with being a good speaker. There’s a limiting belief that to effectively communicate with others, we must be good speakers, especially when conflict or disagreement is present.
Arguing with your assumptions
Arguments aren’t necessarily bad, and trying to prevent them is a futile exercise in trying to change the makeup of what makes us human. What is most important is not ending all disagreements but ensuring that we have accurate disagreements with each other.
A simple question to keep a conversation on track
When this happens, the conversation stops being about the issue at hand and instead becomes a defense of our emotions. And that is a messy, murky place to be.
Why active listening isn't effective
Out of 7 billion+ people on this planet, there is only one person who knows for sure whether or not you’re actually listening, and that person is who you see in the mirror.
The importance of building rapport before difficult conversations
Rapport-building — getting to know someone’s story even when you disagree with a particular opinion or belief they might hold — is an organic process that requires being present in the moment and taking risks by sharing personal experiences and by asking questions.
Curiosity is a practice, not a trait
In the case of atrophying curiosity, it means you always have to have ALL the answers ALL the time.
Are you preventing change in others?
Far too often, we trap people into the box of who they once were despite their best efforts to actually change. We may not even like or agree with who they are, but it is important to recognize people for who they currently are and not a past version of themselves.
Being honest about uncomfortable conversations vs. dangerous ones
You have to be honest about labeling things uncomfortable versus dangerous. Is something truly dangerous, or is it simply uncomfortable and you want to run away from it?
Getting curious means being willing to play the long game
The more we don’t feel seen as humans and the more our choices are attacked without first understanding the makeup of who we are — no matter how wrong it may seem — the more we hold on to those choices because they become the identity we present to the world.
Don't shy away from emotions. Get curious.
When the other side gets curious about our emotions — and more importantly, the true source of those emotions — it can lead to a clearer understanding of the issue, and perhaps even reveal ways to resolve the disagreement or dispute.
The most meaningful things I read in 2022
As 2022 comes to a close, I want to share another group of amazing authors and thinkers who inspired me with their writing this past year.
Don't fall prey to conflict entrepreneurs
We see example after example in popular media of people who make their living off of reducing complicated issues into black-and-white binaries, removing nuance from conversation in favor of parroted talking points, and stereotyping the many based off the actions of the few.