All right, I want to see a show of hands:
how many of you have unfriended someone on Facebook
because they said something offensive about politics or religion,
(Laughter)
And how many of you know at least one person that you avoid
because you just don't want to talk to them?
(Laughter)
You know, it used to be that in order to have a polite conversation,
we just had to follow the advice of Henry Higgins in "My Fair Lady":
Stick to the weather and your health.
But these days, with climate change and anti-vaxxing, those subjects --
(Laughter)
So this world that we live in,
this world in which every conversation
has the potential to devolve into an argument,
where our politicians can't speak to one another
and where even the most trivial of issues
have someone fighting both passionately for it and against it, it's not normal.
Pew Research did a study of 10,000 American adults,
and they found that at this moment, we are more polarized,
than we ever have been in history.
We're less likely to compromise,
which means we're not listening to each other.
And we make decisions about where to live,
who to marry and even who our friends are going to be,
based on what we already believe.
Again, that means we're not listening to each other.
A conversation requires a balance between talking and listening,
and somewhere along the way, we lost that balance.
Now, part of that is due to technology.
The smartphones that you all either have in your hands
or close enough that you could grab them really quickly.
about a third of American teenagers send more than a hundred texts a day.
And many of them, almost most of them, are more likely to text their friends
than they are to talk to them face to face.
There's this great piece in The Atlantic.
It was written by a high school teacher named Paul Barnwell.
And he gave his kids a communication project.
He wanted to teach them how to speak on a specific subject without using notes.
And he said this: "I came to realize..."
(Laughter)
"I came to realize that conversational competence
might be the single most overlooked skill we fail to teach.
Kids spend hours each day engaging with ideas and each other through screens,
but rarely do they have an opportunity
to hone their interpersonal communications skills.
It might sound like a funny question, but we have to ask ourselves:
Is there any 21st-century skill
more important than being able to sustain coherent, confident conversation?"
Now, I make my living talking to people:
Nobel Prize winners, truck drivers,
billionaires, kindergarten teachers,
I talk to people that I like. I talk to people that I don't like.
I talk to some people that I disagree with deeply on a personal level.
But I still have a great conversation with them.
So I'd like to spend the next 10 minutes or so teaching you how to talk
Many of you have already heard a lot of advice on this,
things like look the person in the eye,
think of interesting topics to discuss in advance,
look, nod and smile to show that you're paying attention,
repeat back what you just heard or summarize it.
So I want you to forget all of that.
(Laughter)
There is no reason to learn how to show you're paying attention
if you are in fact paying attention.
(Laughter)
(Applause)
Now, I actually use the exact same skills as a professional interviewer
So, I'm going to teach you how to interview people,
and that's actually going to help you learn how to be better conversationalists.
without wasting your time, without getting bored,
and, please God, without offending anybody.
We've all had really great conversations.
We've had them before. We know what it's like.
The kind of conversation where you walk away feeling engaged and inspired,
or where you feel like you've made a real connection
or you've been perfectly understood.
why most of your interactions can't be like that.
So I have 10 basic rules. I'm going to walk you through all of them,
but honestly, if you just choose one of them and master it,
you'll already enjoy better conversations.
And I don't mean just set down your cell phone
or your tablet or your car keys or whatever is in your hand.
Don't think about your argument you had with your boss.
Don't think about what you're going to have for dinner.
If you want to get out of the conversation,
but don't be half in it and half out of it.
Number two: Don't pontificate.
If you want to state your opinion
without any opportunity for response or argument or pushback or growth,
(Laughter)
Now, there's a really good reason why I don't allow pundits on my show:
Because they're really boring.
If they're conservative, they're going to hate Obama and food stamps and abortion.
If they're liberal, they're going to hate
big banks and oil corporations and Dick Cheney.
And you don't want to be like that.
You need to enter every conversation assuming that you have something to learn.
The famed therapist M. Scott Peck said
that true listening requires a setting aside of oneself.
And sometimes that means setting aside your personal opinion.
He said that sensing this acceptance,
the speaker will become less and less vulnerable
and more and more likely to open up the inner recesses
of his or her mind to the listener.
Again, assume that you have something to learn.
Bill Nye: "Everyone you will ever meet knows something that you don't."
Everybody is an expert in something.
Number three: Use open-ended questions.
In this case, take a cue from journalists.
Start your questions with who, what, when, where, why or how.
If you put in a complicated question, you're going to get a simple answer out.
If I ask you, "Were you terrified?"
you're going to respond to the most powerful word in that sentence,
which is "terrified," and the answer is "Yes, I was" or "No, I wasn't."
"Were you angry?" "Yes, I was very angry."
Let them describe it. They're the ones that know.
Try asking them things like, "What was that like?"
Because then they might have to stop for a moment and think about it,
and you're going to get a much more interesting response.
Number four: Go with the flow.
That means thoughts will come into your mind
and you need to let them go out of your mind.
in which a guest is talking for several minutes
and then the host comes back in and asks a question
which seems like it comes out of nowhere, or it's already been answered.
That means the host probably stopped listening two minutes ago
because he thought of this really clever question,
and he was just bound and determined to say that.
And we do the exact same thing.
We're sitting there having a conversation with someone,
and then we remember that time that we met Hugh Jackman in a coffee shop.
(Laughter)
Stories and ideas are going to come to you.
You need to let them come and let them go.
Number five: If you don't know, say that you don't know.
Now, people on the radio, especially on NPR,
are much more aware that they're going on the record,
and so they're more careful about what they claim to be an expert in
and what they claim to know for sure.
Do that. Err on the side of caution.
Number six: Don't equate your experience with theirs.
If they're talking about having lost a family member,
don't start talking about the time you lost a family member.
If they're talking about the trouble they're having at work,
don't tell them about how much you hate your job.
It's not the same. It is never the same.
All experiences are individual.
And, more importantly, it is not about you.
You don't need to take that moment to prove how amazing you are
Somebody asked Stephen Hawking once what his IQ was, and he said,
"I have no idea. People who brag about their IQs are losers."
(Laughter)
Conversations are not a promotional opportunity.
It's condescending, and it's really boring,
Especially in work conversations or in conversations with our kids,
so we just keep rephrasing it over and over.
Number eight: Stay out of the weeds.
that you're struggling to come up with in your mind.
They don't care. What they care about is you.
They care about what you're like,
So forget the details. Leave them out.
This is not the last one, but it is the most important one.
I cannot tell you how many really important people have said
that listening is perhaps the most, the number one most important skill
Buddha said, and I'm paraphrasing,
"If your mouth is open, you're not learning."
And Calvin Coolidge said, "No man ever listened his way out of a job."
(Laughter)
Why do we not listen to each other?
When I'm talking, I'm in control.
I don't have to hear anything I'm not interested in.
I can bolster my own identity.
The average person talks at about 225 word per minute,
but we can listen at up to 500 words per minute.
So our minds are filling in those other 275 words.
And look, I know, it takes effort and energy
to actually pay attention to someone,
but if you can't do that, you're not in a conversation.
You're just two people shouting out barely related sentences
(Laughter)
You have to listen to one another.
Stephen Covey said it very beautifully.
He said, "Most of us don't listen with the intent to understand.
We listen with the intent to reply."
One more rule, number 10, and it's this one: Be brief.
[A good conversation is like a miniskirt; short enough to retain interest,
but long enough to cover the subject. -- My Sister]
(Laughter)
(Applause)
All of this boils down to the same basic concept, and it is this one:
Be interested in other people.
You know, I grew up with a very famous grandfather,
and there was kind of a ritual in my home.
People would come over to talk to my grandparents,
and after they would leave, my mother would come over to us,
and she'd say, "Do you know who that was?
She was the runner-up to Miss America.
He was the mayor of Sacramento.
She won a Pulitzer Prize. He's a Russian ballet dancer."
And I kind of grew up assuming
everyone has some hidden, amazing thing about them.
And honestly, I think it's what makes me a better host.
I keep my mouth shut as often as I possibly can,
and I'm always prepared to be amazed,
and, most importantly, be prepared to be amazed.
(Applause)