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Now along with the show. All right, welcome back to the show everybody. So I'm really excited about this week's episode. As you know, I don't post very often on social media anymore, but if you're not following me on Instagram, make sure you go ahead and do that. I did make a post a few weeks ago on my Instagram story about emotional maturity and how to deal with people that for lack of a better term get you all wound up. They get you angry or hurt or they just create angst in your life. You probably have somebody like that in your life.
They push your buttons and maybe that person's very close to you. Maybe really close to you.
“And so we're going to talk about that today. You know, life is supposed to be a joyous experience”
at least most of the time. And you got to really evaluate your emotional maturity and how you deal with people that are emotionally immature, which I believe is a sign of weakness in people, hurt people, angry people. And we're going to talk about this today. Let me ask you a question. If you and I met or you met the person in your life who you wanted to spend the rest of your life with let's just say,
"But they said, "Here's the thing. We got to live in my house." And you go, "Okay." All right.
Let me just tell you about my house. My house regularly there's snakes all over it. You get to avoid them. There's a fire that pops up in a room randomly every couple weeks so there's fire in this house all the time. It rains in there. It gets really hot some days and other days it gets freezing cold. Sometimes it feels like you're in an earthquake. The whole house is shaken. You think it's going to
“come down all around you. Then there's other times in this house where it's like a tornado”
blows through it. You don't know where it came from, but it just hits the house and wrecks it. And we're going to live in that house the rest of our lives. So I know you love me, but you need to know the house we're going to live in. And it gets worse than that from time to time. You don't even know what's going on. You can't read it at all. There's no detection and out of the blue and other storm hits. Another fire hits. Another snake pops up.
Then you walk into the wrong room and there's lions and tigers and bears that just attack you. And so it's coming from all angles a lot of the time. Would you rethink that relationship or whether you wanted to live in that house? Maybe you love the person. You said the house part, that part I'm not buying into. Maybe it wasn't even a significant other. What was just a great friend who said, when you come visit me, you know, you won't know when,
but when you come to my house, this is what takes place there. You probably rethink that friendship with you. You would not accept those terms in a long term relationship or in a friendship. Yet we do this all the time with the people around us. Let me say something to you. A truly emotionally mature person does not allow another human to pull them into their pit of anger, hurt, and angst. But people do it all the time. I want you to evaluate whether you're
emotionally mature. I only know this is true because I've allowed this to happen to me far too many times, where how somebody else acts pulls me into their pit of anger, fear, angst. Then you find yourself with these people. Because by the way, people humans have an emotional home. Don't they? I've talked about this in my book, The Power of One More. You have an emotional home as does every human being you meet. Your default emotion is bliss, joy, ecstasy, passion, peace,
laughter. If you're in those emotions, most of the time, you'll be times when you're not at home and you visit other places and you will feel anger or fear or sadness or scarcity. But everyone has an emotional home. And if you love somebody, but they're emotional home. In other words, the home they're going to have you live in with them. Because you live in that home with
Them is anger, fear, anxiety, depression, frustration, angst, scarcity.
You've chosen to live in that home with this person for the rest of your life. And an emotionally immature person allows when someone goes to their home of anger, angst, and frustration, they go there with them. And they try to win a conversation. You ever be in a conversation with somebody where they get angry, so you get anger. They put you down, so you come back with something about them. They bring up something from your past, so you bring up two things from their past. And it ends up being
this emotional immaturity pit that you end up in. You know exactly what I'm talking about. That is no way to live your life yet. So many times in our life, these people, this stimulus, if we're emotionally immature, we go there with them with this immature person. And we end up being more immature
“than they are. And so if the quality of your life is in fact the quality of your emotions, this may be”
one of the most important episodes you ever listen to. I want you to begin to think about yourself
and evaluate yourself in terms of your emotional maturity. I know I'm doing this as I speak to you. Remember, I only know this because I've allowed this to happen to me far too many times myself. So you don't evaluate two things. A, your own responses when these people begin to behave this way, which is more often than not, isn't it, for some people. And be their proximity to you. And whether you really would live in that house, if you knew that was the house, even if you like or love them.
Because here's the truth, you choose your response, your reaction, or the lack thereof. You don't win by getting more angry, more reckless, and more out of control with somebody. That's a race to the bottom and the loser is you. And so when you're dealing with somebody who want a regular basis, they pit up anger. They're passive aggressive with you. They're a victim. They start generating these emotions and you find yourself trying to win. I could be more angry.
I can put you down more. And you think, well, no, I'm standing up for myself. No, you're not. You're being emotionally immature with a very emotionally immature person in your midst. Being more angry mean or threatening is not a sign of strength. It's a sign of fear and animaturity. A strong person when someone is emotionally immature somehow finds a way to stay in peace, to stay in bliss, to stay composed, to stay in God. Strength is resisting the desire to hurt them back.
I really want to talk about this for a second because, you know, I know that when I was an
emotionally immature person and I still can't be, when someone would become angry with me, I would try to win that conversation to be more angry. If they hurt me, I wanted to hurt them back.
“But ask yourself a question. Is that mature? Is that good for your own emotional health?”
Is that good for your own well-being? Is that good for your own inflammation? These people inflame us literally. They inflame us. And so I want you to evaluate something. I already know by the way, you're thinking about that person who does it. Aren't you? You got that person. You're thinking about their face. Their name. They may be somebody you're married to that you date. Maybe a good friend of yours, maybe a parent. Maybe a sibling. If you're emotionally mature when they get angry,
you don't go there. You rise above. You disconnect. You become an observer of what's taking place. When they get loud, you get quiet. When they get mean, you get kind. When they get hurtful, you get loving. And these are choice. These are choices that we make in our life. You're choosing to get angry with them. You're choosing to race them to the bottom of the emotional game. Nobody wins when you do it. Nobody feels better after. You know what it else is? It's spiritual
immaturity. What if you would begin to act as God would want you to, not the enemy? Here's what
“I think. If you believe in that, which I do, the enemy is the one going. Now you get more angry.”
Now you put them down again. Now you bring up something from the past. Now you get immature. Now you be the victim. Now you retaliate. Now you be passive aggressive. And all of a sudden you're in this out of control spiral. And you gotta ask yourself, how many minutes of your life do you want to spend in this spiral of emotional immaturity? How much time do you want to live in your emotional home of anger, frustration, sadness, anxiety?
You don't mean like you get wound up about stuff in life. But what if you decided to start to act as God would want you to? What if you begin to surrender winning the argument with this poor person? I've started to feel empathy for people in my life who are around me, friends or otherwise, who begin to behave in this way? And you get into patterns and your relationships with people that are so unhealthy, so dangerous. This could be at work. Maybe it's somebody at work that pushes your
buttons. You know what I'm talking about, right? You are best to rise above, disengage, and act as God
Would want you to.
frequency when they start to go low. When they start to reduce the frequency of all these negative things and emotions and put downs or whatever they do to you, you stay in the high emotional frequency, by the way, nothing, nothing will frustrate them more than you doing that. Nothing frustrates an angry person more than when you come back with kindness. They're trying to pull you into this race to the bottom and by the way, if they're naturally a little bit more than angry or sad or victimized
person than you are, they're better at it than you. Don't even try. They are professionals at being a victim. They are professionals at being sad. They are professionals at anxiety. They are professionals at retaliation. They are professionals at anger. And you, you dabble in it when you go into their
“house. Stay in your house. You choose your emotions. The quality of your life is the quality of your”
emotions and too many of you are spending too many minutes and seconds of your life and emotions that you don't want to be in because you're emotionally immature still. If another human being can control you that easily, you need to look at you. This is your choice. I'm speaking to myself by the way. But you need to look at you. This is not about them. They are clearly who they are. They are clearly in their emotional home. In fact, just for a second, when I say somebody who
lives in an emotional home of being sad or a victim or angry or there's somebody who takes a superior position and puts you down and tries to minimize you. Any of those things. Who do you just think of? Who do you just think of? Work, family, friends. Okay. That's their home. You stay in yours. Okay. And when you begin to go into theirs, you lack maturity. It's a
“son of spiritual maturity. By the way, if you still get in a adrenaline rush out of retaliation,”
you know, when you go back and forth, oh, man, kind of get in the adrenaline rush. Ask yourself why that is. You know, I'd reason I put the podcast out today about this is I'm traveling a lot and I'm flying commercial when I fly now as a choice. And I just watch humans. We're so mean to each other. We're so harsh. We're so dismissive. It's rare to meet a kind person. It's rare to meet someone who's generous. Who cares? It's not out to get it, you know? And I'd like to just make a spec a sand in the
beach of life by pushing back against that for a second and resisting it. You know, you don't have to be that way. They ever be on an airplane and wash when they say group two boarding and humans just rush an elbow people out of assist unbelievable or how they don't make eye contact when someone serves them
or the arguments people get into. And these are strangers never mind you're having some of these
same arguments with the person you say you love, who says they love you, who's your sibling,
“who's your parent, who's your girlfriend or boyfriend? It's some point, you have to ask yourself”
do I really want to live in this house the rest of my life? And you have two choices. A don't ever go into that house with them again. Ever you don't get more angry, you don't race them to the bottom, you don't put them down more or be leave the house all together. You only have so many minutes in your life. I think you were born to spend most of those minutes in bliss, most of those minutes in peace. And you know what sucks about having someone in your life like that? They will give you a few moments
of bliss. You will get a few moments of peace. You will get a few moments of ecstasy in joy.
And the same people that are so incredible are getting to create tremendous hurt and angst and
disappointment by contrast that are typically the people that are best to giving us pleasure in joy and bliss. And so when these fleeting little five or 10 percent of the moments that it's great, some of us have chosen. I'll take the 80 or 90 percent of the time. That's not so good for these spikes of adrenaline I get when they're kind or nice. What's crazy though is they're not anymore kind or nice. It's the contrast because they most of the time aren't. And so in a few moments when they are,
you're so grateful. It's almost like you're groveling for the kind of them, the nice them, the it piece them, the not to press them. The one that's not angry, the one that's not superior putting us down. It's no way to live. That's not much sure. That's not grown up. You are born to be in that environment. You are born to behave like that. And then they pull out this part of you that when you're done, you got an adrenaline rush and you're like, I don't feel better
about myself after behaving like that. Yuck, I need to take a shower for how I talked or thought.
So please evaluate this near some powerful questions. Is this choice and this behavior I'm now
making with this person when I race them to the bottom? Move them a closer to God or further away.
My faith is a Christian as it closer to God or further away.
as it higher frequency or lower frequency. And also, is this really making you closer to
the other goals? You think getting into these fits of anger or frustration or getting you closer to your other goals? Are making you a better human? Are making you wealthier? Are making you more
“productive? Are helping you be more clear thinking? Are contributing to your energy?”
Are reducing the inflammation in your body and giving you more strength and power? Are you crazy? This is all kryptonite to Superman or superwoman. A Mosul intelligence involves understanding and managing your own emotions and recognizing those of others. How it impacts relationships, how it impacts communication and overall well-being.
One thing to become is become an observer when this person begins to spiral and they show up as
the angry them or the victim them or the frustrated them or the sad them or the woe is me them or the put you down them or the gossip them. Get away from it above it and observe it. Get quiet. Get still. What happens is they get us riled up. Don't they? Dell PCs with Intel inside are built for the moments that matter. For the moments you plan and the ones you don't. Built for the busy days that turned into all night study sessions,
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intelligence that makes updates around your schedule. Not in the middle of it. They don't build tech for tech sake. They built it for you. Find technology built for the way you work at Dell.com/DLPCs built for you. A real key of mental weakness is the avoidance of discomfort. Mentally weak people avoid doing hard things. And let me tell you something. Not only is this person mentally weak but the hard thing to do is to resist getting angry with them.
Is to resist putting them back down. Is to play their game. That's the hard thing to do. So if you give into that every time that make you mentally weak or mentally strong, I would submit it makes me mentally weak when I do it. You are also mentally weak when you can't avoid doing the thing that you know is the most harmful. Now, by the way, mentally weak people avoid the avoidance of discomfort physically. They avoid it in exercise. They avoid it in emotional
discomfort oftentimes. But more importantly, they refuse to have difficult conversations.
“See, at some point, once the emotions go away, you need to be able to step back with that”
person when they've calm down and you've helped them calm down and say, this is not acceptable. I will not live like this. I won't join you in this home you live in. And I have empathy for the fact that you live in this home, but you're not pulling me in it anymore. This is not how I speak to people. It's not how I treat people. And it's certainly not how I'm going to be spoken to or treat it. This is unacceptable. You do that after the emotions have calmed down. How do you know you're with
somebody who might be emotionally weak or spiritually weak? They're a victim most of the time. Everyone's out to get them. Listen to their language. Are they a victim? Number two thing. I think they avoid doing difficult things, as I've said. Number three, they are unable to take feedback. Everything that is said to them as feedback is felt as criticism. They defend and defend and deflect. They defend and defend and defend. And then what happens is now you get mad and start doubling
down and making it worse than it is with them. They're unable to take feedback. They also will do one thing where you say, "Well, can you please, I'll flip it back on you." But what about you? And they'll change the lens and put the camera on you to take it off of them. Who are these people really? They're God's children also. They're sad and scared people. Some of them appear on the outside very big and strong. They're scared. The flip side of anger is fear. People that try to make
people feel sad are sad. We all know that hurt people end up hurting people. But remember this, what if you could not only rise above and not participate, but as you observe them, you almost actually you do feel empathy. As God would. This is no way to live. This is no way to behave. People who put other people down or gossip hate themselves. Did you know that? When they're putting you down or someone else or gossiping another person, that is a form of self hatred, people who truly
love themselves have no room in their heart, their mind, or their spirit to put down other people.
It's just something that would come out of them.
you can't act out that way. But when you live in an emotional home of angst fear. Like scarcity, low self esteem, you act out in these ways. These folks are not comfortable in peace. They become too familiar with stress and tension. They are inflammation,
literally by definition. These folks are inflammation in your life. We always say that
in our bodies really disease doesn't get all the new data tells us the number one thing in
“a body that's the worst thing you can have for disease. Our in the future early death is inflammation”
your body. Everything from cancer to heart disease to aches and pains. Inflammation, you want to rid the body of inflammation. Well, these people when they behave this way, they try to inflame you and you automatically begin to play their game and you become inflamed. And by the way, you become emotionally inflamed when you're emotionally inflamed, your body becomes inflamed. And so these folks are inflammation. You need to rid it from your life. You do not participate
in it. These folks, number one, they blame others. Number two, they look for external validation constantly. Let me say that to you. Number one, they blame other people. Nothing's their fault.
Everything's a victim. Everything's coming at them. They blame others. Number two, they are always
looking for external validation constantly. Listen to their language. So-and-so said this about me
“today. So-and-so said this. So-and-so said that. When they walk in, so they're looking, they've”
given their resume. They've got to look a certain way. They've got to tell you their background. I got to tell you what their car. They're something they get validation for. I was smart. I was this in high school. They're looking for validation. Number three, they don't tell you the truth. Do you have anybody in your life that blames others evaluate this? Do you have anybody in your life that looks for internal, but you have that friend, by the way, who's constantly looking
for validation from other people instead of from God instead of from internally? Do you have that boy friend or girlfriend, husband or wife, boss, person at work? They look for external validation constantly. Third thing, they don't tell the truth. They don't tell the truth. They pervert and warp reality to make it bend their world of you and then they don't tell the truth. Number four, they choose what's easy over what's right. How do you know this? It's easy to
get angry. It's easy to blame. It's easy to put people down. It's easy not to go to the gym. It's so somewhere in their life, they choose the easy over what's right. What's right is to treat the people you love with kindness. What's right is to be gentle and to protect strangers that you don't know. Which right is to stand up for people who are hurt. Not to put people down and make them hurt. So they choose what's the easy thing. It's hard to stand up and say, don't do that and to protect
people. It's hard to keep your emotions under control when someone is spinning out of control. When they're hurting you, not to hurt them back. When they're angry, not to get to angry back. And number five, they're a victim. The victim mentality.
“Let me ask you a question. What's the emotional home that they live in most of the time?”
And do you really want to live in that house? Because you don't have to. Either A, you change the way you interact with them, which helps change them or B, you move out of that house. You get distance from that house. You deserve to live a life of emotional, bliss, and peace
and abundance. The majority of the time. Life's about duality. It's about contrast. We've never
know how beauty full it is to be warm if we've never been cold. Right? It's okay that there's some duality in our life. There are moments of sadness. There are moments of anger. There are moments of frustration. But they should be moments not the norm in our lives. You know, the other element of emotional immaturity is getting wound up and worked up beyond what is a normal response to things out of your control. And I want to address this last. Here's a form of emotional maturity going absolutely crazy
over something like world politics. This last weekend, I got picked up in the car. Great guy in the Uber picks me up. We say hello and immediately he went into politics. He hates Trump, F Trump, this so-and-so support. I mean, it was out of control. He was yelling, talking to me about my gay brother. I don't know a little bit of yelling. You know, he's, you know what I'm talking about? Like, worked up. I mean, so crazy worked up about a human being he's never met,
that he probably never will meet and out of something mainly out of his control. I'm not suggesting you don't have opinions. I'm not suggesting you don't stand for things. I'm not so, so you don't get in line and march or stand up or hold a sign or state your opinion or post. But you know what I mean,
Where things out of your control get you so worked up emotionally that you're...
become dominated. This, this entire ride, I'm a nice guy in the back city. Probably could have learned
“a few things from me or about me. I always try to learn things about the person I'm with,”
learn from them. He spent that entire ride in anger all over the place. I mean, it was, I felt, I got out of the car and felt empathy. Now, I could have got angry back and said something about a point. He said that it didn't make sense or I could have agreed with one and joined him in his area. Yeah, you're right about the tariffs. I'm like, my gosh, you, with this was the last 30 minutes of your life. You certainly were pretty dead gummatic control and immature. You know exactly what
I'm talking about. He's like, I had to block my family on Facebook because they like him. And I said, you've blocked your family. Yeah, and we don't get together anymore. I see over you guys arguing, what are you serious? This is your blood. Like your mom? Really? You don't talk to your mom because she has a different opinion than you about someone neither one of you have ever met before
and never will meet. Wow. I just got out of the car. I felt such empathy. I was proud that I didn't
join him in his anger about it or refute it and get more angry with him to prove him wrong. That would have been a race to the bottom. Huh. What if I disagreed with everything he said? So now we're
“back and forth angry, more angry, put him down, put that down. Well, what about Biden? What about this?”
So I could have gone back the other way. That would have been a pleasant drive. Great way to spend 30 minutes of my life, right? Or joined him in his anger. You're right. Can you imagine that this has become normalized in our culture in our society? It's what most of you listen to every day. You just feed yourself more of it. How's your heart feel? How's your spirit feel? How's your inflammation? I'm not saying don't listen to be informed. I'm not saying don't stand up. I'm not even
saying don't scream from the rooftops about issues that matter to you. But are you serious? This is
an all-consuming reality TV show that you're not in, but you think you are. Literally got from the car, got to the airport, got on the airplane. I'm not kidding you. And now I sat next to somebody who loved Trump. But God wasn't the conversation. Hate liberals. Hate some said words that I won't even repeat about Biden and who they back and these there for the party of the blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And anger, anger wound up. By the way, they both think they're complete
experts. They had anger, angst, frustration, put downs. Really divisive language that Trump hated had an unbelievably divisive language that Biden kind of liberal hated guy had. And then I'm like, well, wait a minute. I'm almost sitting next to this one for three hours. I've just had 30 minutes with the other guy on the other side. I ain't doing this. So at some point I literally said I touched his arm as a brother. I could tell you really passionate about this. I just want
you to know I am not spending the next three hours and these emotions with you. You seem like a great guy, man. You seem like a great guy. I love your passion for what you're doing. I'm going to put my headphones on. I'm going to listen to some great music. And if this was the last three hours of my life, I ain't spending it this way. I completely clear on your opinion. I could read everything you
“just said on the internet. By the way, same thing with the other guy. And what we do in our life is”
then we surround ourselves with people who completely validate these emotions. You're right, you're right. You're right. This dude that drove me in the Uber can't even conceive of somebody who disagrees with any of the points and either could the guy on the airplane the other side. I just thought we are one wound up culture. By the way, one guy thought he was a victim to everything Biden did. The other guy thought he was a victim to everything Trump did. They blamed
they both look for external validation by being right about it from a stranger in me. Neither one of them had the total truth. And they're both choosing what was really easy over what was right. Which might be to listen. Might be to listen. Might be to learn. I know some would say, hey, you got to stand for something. You got to have an opinion. Absolutely you do. And I believe in that. I also believe that there's an articulate loving kind and actually influential way to stand for
something and have an opinion. And that is not the way to do it. Behaving emotionally ridiculous and a totally immature way is not the right way to take a stand or to have an opinion or to create any difference or change or is that you're really not interested in creating any change. You're interested in being angry. You're interested in fighting your chest. You're interested in being a victim. You're interested in angst. You're interested in stress. You're interested in getting validation
for. But if you really wanted to persuade, if you really wanted to take a stand, you would probably do it in an emotionally mature way. Where you'd be much more articulate. Where you wouldn't put
People on the defensive.
connected emotionally to somebody where there's a spiritual connection where there's an energy
that says, I can trust you and like you and believe in you and that you treat me as a brother or a sister. And you have my best interest in mind. That's not what I see or hear almost any of the
“time. And that's why I make the point that I'm making. And again, I love passion. But what I'm saying”
right now, even as I say it, many people would probably disagree because it's just our culture now. It's the mind virus we now live in. What did they do today? What did he do today? What's happening in the world today? And I know some of these things are very serious. They affect our pocket books. They affect health. They affect rights. I'm not talking about any of that. I'm talking about getting wound up to the point of irrationality of it being all consuming. Where it literally
takes from your life and the quality of the life of the people around you. And you vibrated a lower frequency. You're further from God. You're not as productive. You don't have as much energy for the right things. You've expanded it on ridiculous things. And you spend your life in these emotions. And then, by the way, you leave this planet. I know you want to make it a better one. I know you want to change it. But you're also supposed to enjoy your time here to some extent and contribute,
“not just say what's wrong. To contribute. And so these are things I've noticed. I think emotional”
immaturity and spiritual immaturity is at an epidemic rate in our culture. And what it contributes to overall ask yourself this, especially if you disagree with the last thing I said, does that contribute to more kindness, more peace, more gentleness, more understanding, more elevated ways of living? Or is it gotten a bit extreme? Just a bit extreme. So whether it's people that create emotional immaturity in your life and you're around emotionally immature people, topics, situations, circumstances,
all of it can trigger an emotionally immature person to behave in an emotionally immature way. My driver was a grown man yelling, driving me in his Uber, dropping F bombs about someone
he's never met before. Well, I sat in the back of his car. The guy on the airplane next to me
was using profanity and derogatory names for certain groups of people that was beyond disgusting. And they're both on different sides of the aisle, both incredibly emotionally immature people. There has to be a way to elevate the conversation where it would actually be productive and mature. So whether it's world issues or whether it's personal relationships, I want to challenge you to not have a race to the bottom. Race to the top,
elevate, observe, listen, communicate with dignity, kindness, generosity, and most of all intelligence. The most intelligent you is the least wound up in the most calm. Isn't she? Isn't he? Very short in a mission here, folks. I'm glad you're enjoying the show so far. Don't forget to follow the show on Apple and Spotify. Links are in the show notes. Now on door next guest.
All right, welcome back to the show, everybody. I try to make it a practice not to have a lot of attorneys on the show. It's just sort of a rule of thumb. I'm just kidding. Don't mind attorney listeners. But in this case, this man's work is so good. And I mean this. I saw him out. I like when I see a relatively new face on the scene that is doing work that is not like
“everybody else's, that it's his own. And then I believe his work can dramatically impact your life from”
a productivity standpoint, a piece of mind standpoint, an influenced standpoint. And he's got a book out right now called the next conversation. Are you less talk more? And I consider him and I don't say this often to be a communication expert. And you will see that reveal itself throughout the next hour. You are going to learn so much and take so many notes today from Jefferson Fisher. Jefferson welcome to the show finally brother. And thank you so much for having me. I am truly honored to be here.
It's a it's a pinfield moment. It's great to meet you here. Let's start out with his content. You guys is so specific is what I like about it. It's not just general principles. There's actually real phrase theology real words. We're perhaps you are the secondary person is what I would call it. So you could be husband and wife, boyfriend, girlfriend, friend, boss, and person they supervise. But one has sort of asserted the superior position in a conversation if that makes sense.
Almost like they're always teaching you a lesson or they're in the control position. Is there a
way to sort of wrestles the wrong word? But reestablish pecking order or at least equality in a commerce. You don't even when I say that that you have the people that in your life that talk to you as if they're the expert on everything. You're not they're in charge. You're not they're picking
The restaurant.
dynamic. I started with one of the hard questions first because I think more people find themselves
invisible pecking order conversations almost than maybe they realize. Let's split the dynamic too. Let's say it's if it's one on one much harder because this person has constructed their whole identity most likely to this facade. If it is let's say you're an a meeting in that person trying to establish the pecking order. The other people will change the dynamic for you. You don't have to push back. You just can't be pushed over. Let's say one on one with this conversation
with somebody who feels like they're more dominant. The biggest thing you're going to do is just not be pushed over. Meaning you're not going to continue to chase everything that they say. You're not going to push back. Because they're looking for that threat. We call it one off of ducks back. Where anything that somebody says you can just say, okay, noted, I got it. No, if I have any questions I'll ask. This ability to kind of be in the pocket and your communication. The temptation is we want
to compete with them. Oh, you just want skydiving. Oh, that's great. I just went twice. Oh, you
“know, Ed, it's great. Yeah, you need to. And they start to compete with one another of how many”
names they can drop, how many experiences they can share. But all that does is show more and tell more about their insecurity than it does really about any kind of true substance. Let's say it, let's just use door alphas or the people that are very confident in the communication. The conversation
typically say much less. You've been in those meetings where the person who always has their
two cents, the person who always has something to say is the person most likely the least removed from the actual true conversation of what's happening. They have to tell you so much so that you can know how smart they are. The real top dog is the person that's the most quiet. And when that person speaks, everybody's quiet and everybody listens. So insecurities are very loud confidence is very quiet. You said about leaders too. This struck me where you said actually great leaders
learn to say more with literally fewer words than the non-leader. You believe that's one of the traits of a great communicator of a leader, correct? Correct. Good leaders respond in conversation. Great leaders leave room for conversation. So when there is this mentality that the leader has to
“say, oh, I'm captain of the ship and everybody should know it. Who do you think you're talking to?”
And they need to correct and drive traffic and go, go, go, go. The best leaders are ones that they don't have to prove everything. In situ, people feel like they have to prove. They have to say a whole lot just so you believe that they're smart. Confident people know that. Great leaders already know that. They're the ones that have this calm energy. In my view, the best leaders have a calm energy about them. When they're on the floor of whatever is happening, instead of this
erratic, you know, what's going on? Okay, we need to do this and they're starting shouting and getting mad and yelling at people versus the person who comes on the floor and goes, okay, what do we need to do next? What's happening next? Instead of the blame, it's where we're moving forward. So driving the conversation in a way that sets authority, people are looking for anchors in conversation. Same thing in their everyday business. Employees, supervisors, whoever it is,
“they're looking for the anchors in their organization and segment everyday conversation. So you have to”
find the way to be confident enough to be the anchor. Brothers, so good. You buy the way you exhibit that by the way. From the minute we flipped the camera on even before we went live, there's a deliberate calmness to the way in which you listen. You actually listen calmly. It's one of the things I noticed about you instantaneously when the camera went on. Most of you don't know this because I'm an entrepreneur,
but my major in college was actually broadcasting. And so it's amazing that God had this way 30 years
later to create podcasts and then I was able to take advantage of that background. But one of the things you have to learn in broadcasting when you write your copy is to write things with fewer words because you have to deliver segments in these little bites of time. And that taught me to communicate with fewer words saying the same thing other people take more words to do. And I do believe that that's an effective use. If you watch communicators, they're fewer words they use.
It's almost like someone watching on broadcasting. But I want to make sure everybody gets the book too because we're going into a lot of stuff. It's the next conversation. Are you less talk more? What if you're with somebody who I used it earlier, but I want to go a little bit deeper, they pick on you. They kind of not at you a little bit. Everything is almost passive aggressive in the way they say things. And you find yourself almost being put down subtly when you communicate
with this person. And I find this an awful lot lately with couples that are friends of mine,
Married couples.
passive aggressive with one another in the way they communicate. And I feel empathy for the one that I think is the one receiving most of the aggression. Is there something you can do when you feel like someone's communicating with you that way? Is there a phraseyology or a strategy for that? Let's separate in two different categories. So one, let's say is kind of this more just passive aggressive bucket. The other is let's ramp it up to somebody being a little bit more overtly disrespectful
rude. So when this first bucket is passive aggressive, these are people that most likely just
have grown up that way. This is what they solved, mirrored, conversation and arguments throughout their life. And they don't know how to express that kind of thing. So when they slide in that negative
“comment that you know there's something to that. A simple question of like you should I read”
into that or is there more to that? Or in this goes for Chris Foss, dear friend and I love his question is, sounds like you have a reason for saying that. I love that phrase. I also love sounds like there's more to that. So anytime you can just quickly ask, sounds like there's more to that or ask them should I read into that? That tends to draw out the passive aggressiveness because they're not expecting you to kind of call them to the floor. On the flip side of somebody saying more
aggressive things towards you. My recommendation is begin your question with, did you mean? Did you mean
for that to sound rude? Did you say that to embarrass me? Did you say that to hurt my feelings? Did you say that to offend me? When you say, did you mean it is too full. One is giving them the grace of perhaps they said it in a way they did not mean and it's going to allow them to fix it. Like at least with me on my wife or texting and something seems like it's off. Instead of saying, "Why are you being so short? What's wrong?" The question asked the question, "Did you mean for
that to sound short?" Every time, it is like, "Oh no, no, no, no, sorry. I'm picking up the kids or I was checking out the grocery store and getting gas. You get that K or K and you're like, "Okay, I guess I guess they hate me." I guess they're in a mood. And then you naturally get in a mood and then you respond defensively, which causes them to respond offensively. And now you're convinced, you've convinced yourself you're under attack. So it's this feedback loop that's not helpful to you.
So when you begin with, did you mean it's a great way to set somebody to want to give them that grace of fixing it? But, too, it's calling attention to what they were wanting to do. Did you say that
“and embarrassing me? Did you say that to offend me? It is, or did you mean for that to sound rude?”
Like, that is a very quick way to address it out in the open and if they're thinking of double down on it or not? Well, you do that and remember, by the way, this is so good. Well, you do that in reverse if you feel that what you've set has been misinterpreted. In other words, if you feel like you're, I do this better in business than I do personal life. You've been also the impersonal life. I think I just let everything out the window that I know that are tools,
which is so stupid. When it comes to business and pretty good at this with friends and family, I devolve into the most emotionally immature person sometimes. But, so let's say we have gone back and forth and maybe I've said something the other way that they're hurt by. Well, you slow a conversation. Now, for example, and say something like, what did you hear me say? How will you handle that if the person is now coming back at you for something they believe you said that's
passive aggressive or demeaning or rude? Awesome question. This happens all the time, especially in relationships, but I'd say even work too. When somebody tells you something, you've been in that situation where somebody is going, that's not what you said. You said this and they kind of give a voice that doesn't even sound like your voice and gives an intonation. And you're like, I didn't even say it like that. And all of a sudden, now you're going, that's not what I said.
I didn't say it like that. You're just pushing what you thought you conveyed. And nine
tops out of ten, it is inaccurate because what is said is not always what's received. So instead of
this, that's not what I said. You are going to ask the question, what did you hear? What did you hear? Because now it's not about what I am putting out. I am now getting curious of what you heard,
“because that's what matters. Anytime you had that kind of confrontation or that miscommunication”
instead of going, no, no, that's not what that's not what I said. And kind of dismissing their whole experience or their perspective. By the way, it's very hard to judge. It's like making your own movie, but not having an audience and going, no, that's not how the movie gets. It's like, nobody else has seen it. Only you're the one who thinks it's that way. So when you ask the question, what did you hear and they explain it, that's when you say, that was not my intent or
I apologize for that impression, or I would recommend as begin your sentence ...
I can see how you feel that way. I can see how they're coming. Whenever you say, I can see why you feel that way. I can see why that would upset you. That I can see, you say, hey, I took a second to walk over to where you're standing and I turned to look the same way that you're looking. And I can confirm, yeah, what you see is reasonable. What you see is justified. You know what? That makes sense. I can see that. That right there just goes,
“boom, it naturally takes down the aggression. This, I have to win. You have to see it. What I see.”
Anytime you can do that in use words of perspective, like, do you perspective, see? That is going to help somebody go, oh, I feel heard. I feel understood. And by that, they're going more receptive to the progress. This is so good. You guys, just so you know, when you're listening to this, the reason I want to Jefferson on and the reason I think there should be more work in this topic is there's like only two or three people in the world that even discuss this stuff. And it, it may be
in the top three most important things in life. They'll be able to communicate your point and to
be able to overcome adversity and a conversation and a difficulty and maintain or extend relationships. This is not stuff that's taught anywhere yet. It should be. That was a great conversation. And if you want to hear the full interview, be sure to follow the Edmy Let's Show on Apple and Spotify, links are in the show notes. Here's an excerpt I did with our next guest. All right, welcome back to the show everybody. You know, today was a very important episode for me in terms of scheduling this today,
“because I think it's such an important topic for a couple reasons. Number one, one of my great concerns”
in our culture right now is the way we talk with one another. The way we have conversations. It just seems to me over the last 20, 30 years in our culture, we've lost the ability to have a conversation with somebody that we might not agree with in a productive way. And I'm sure you all agree with me as well, it's become very difficult in our times to dialogue with somebody that you might have a disagreement with or have a difficult conversation with. The art and science of learning to have a conversation
is one of the most important skills you can have in life. Even with my kids, one of the things I
hope they leave our home with is the ability to communicate. The ability to have a conversation with somebody. And it is a skill. And there are insights in how to do it better. And I just feel like it could change our world if we talk to one another better. And I think you'd agree with me too, whether it be your personal relationships with political discussion or religious discussion as a leader in your company, having a conversation about creating ideas or a new direction, whatever it might be,
learning to be a better conversationalist. And I have the perfect guest. His name is Chuck Wisener, Chuck's got a book out right now called The Art of Conscious Conversations, Transforming How We Talk, Listen and Interact. And I'm really excited to get into this topic. So Chuck, welcome to the show. Thanks for having me. It's a pleasure to be here. It really is for me. You know, a lot of times of all these people on my show that have these huge followings or guests. So, you know, that, you know,
major notoriety. And I've always found that oftentimes it's the topics on my show that really
move people. And more and more people are concerned about the way we talk with one another. And so,
“I want to get right into it. How do you talk to somebody if it's a difficult conversation?”
One of the things I saw that you said is you ask in your writing, do your patterns of judging others reflect behaviors you don't like or want to recognize or won't recognize about yourself. So, when we're in a difficult conversation with somebody, you know, maybe we disagree with them. I want to go to the hard stuff first. Like, I'm a Republican and someone's a Democrat. I'm a Democrat and someone's a Republican. Something like that, you know, these hard conversations.
What are some of the keys in being better at doing it? So, it's actually a productive experience. There are definitely keys that we're going to talk about. And it's also important to know that when you're in a difficult conversation, both parties have to be willing to start with truth. And if we can't have a foundation of truth, then you're going to have a very good conversation will remain difficult. There's opinions and there's facts and there's emotions.
And we get all of those mixed up, right? And they all get discombobled and jumbled up in our brain. But if we realize that my opinion is just my opinion and it's not the truth, then we can slowly, we can say, okay, what's driving my opinion? And we sort of can open our hand and go, this is why I'm thinking how I'm thinking. This is what my standards are. There's four archetypal questions in the book.
This is what I'm worried about. This is my concern. Here's what I'd like. We can start to just open our hands and say, okay, I'm an opinion. Let's dance with that. Let's see what we can learn from each other. That's a very different conversation with just in just coming at each other. Yeah, you also say in the book that I've learned to do this myself is to fall in love with asking
Questions.
create change in your company or whether you're an argument with a spouse or a disagreement,
“or you got to talk about something different. Like I've used, I've used politics as an example.”
It's the big one, right? Like they're good. I'm right. I'm right. You're wrong. And the idea of making statements all the time and telling stories as opposed to asking questions. Right. Right. And the idea of whether I'm doing it to myself and asking myself what's driving my opinion was driving my judgment and why am I so hooked on the thing. Right? We can also the questions help us like each question and help us open someone else's hand.
Because we can ask, "What do you really want? What do you desire here? What do you want out of this? What are your standards for measuring this opinion that you have?" So our questions can literally help other people unlock and unfist. Right? Yeah. And but we aren't trained to ask questions. We're trained to have answers. That's one of the major dilemmas. And then we get into school and we're awarded for racing our hand.
And then we get into business and we're awarded for being the smartest person in the room. Right. And that's the counter to the the opposite effect is asking questions. Well, this notion of raising your hand was my next thing. So you're reading my mind. And I think one of the art forms of being a great conversationalist is actually the art of
“listening. And that's why questions matter so much. And you're precise to the right. In school,”
the teachers still talking and asking the question, "We're taught. We're rewarded. Raise your hand while they're still talking." And with that does to me, I want you to speak to this. To me. What that does to me is it means I'm really not listening to what you're saying. I'm already thinking about what I'm going to say back to you and my answer or my judgment or my assessment about you. Most people are already raising their hand metaphorically when most other people
are still talking. And they wonder, "Why am I not connecting with this person? Why can't we find common ground?" Because while they're talking, you've got your hand raised already. I got the answer. I know the truth. I want to say something and rather finishing and letting them finish their statement. Yeah, so our brain is spinning our answer. And so there's no space actually to absorb what's coming at us from the other person. And part of that, actually the main reason that is we
“are, we get addicted to our position. Our ego and our identity gets addicted to, I believe this.”
And if I believe this is true, then that defines who I am. And that is often why we enter with this or why we enter in defensively. And can't just say, "Okay, I do have an opinion. I'm going to set that aside and I'm going to see if I can explore really what's driving this other person's thinking." But if I just want to go back for a second, everybody, first thing to ask yourself is, what's your ability to ask questions? And to ask questions without judgment as someone's
answering you. In other words, can you learn the art of not raising your hand metaphorically when someone's talking and be fully present with their answer absent as much as you can of judgment? We'll talk about triggers in a little bit because you have some brilliant stuff in there on triggers
which I teach in other areas of life. I never thought about terms of a conversation. But the
one thing that opened my eyes and why I wanted you on, among many things, is this idea of there's four conversations. Right. And one of them is storytelling. But take the time on this and elaborate, what are the four different conversations and what do they mean? So these are four types of conversations. They organize the book and the reason they work well to do that is they each conversation has its own lessons to learn tools to try practices to try on because each conversation demands
different skill sets. And they're all interconnected. We're generally without knowing about the conversations. We're just in conversation like fish and water. And as soon as we get away to them, they're storytelling, there's collaboration, there's creativity and there's commitment conversations. Already, we have a different lens to think about conversations. Right. Right. If I took you to spend six months with the innuids in Alaska and they taught you there's 27 names
for snow in those six months, when we came back to New England, you would never see snow the same way.
Because all of a sudden you have distinctions about snow that allow you to see and perceive and have a different story about snow. Right. Conversations the same way. If we can begin to think about different conversations and different ways to listen and different ways to ask questions and why it matters, we can't be in conversation as innocently. Right. Yeah. We go, oh, I get I need to wake up a little bit because I'm walk down and I'm creating a fight because I'm walk down. Right. So that's
Why the four conversations are just the beginning to say, we can start lookin...
with a better lens. Yeah. So good. The four he said by the way, but I just want to make sure you get a story telling collaborative conversations, creative conversations, and commitment conversations. I want to give you a compliment on how your work helped me a little bit on the story telling a part or listening for someone's story. I have a friend who I was watching two friends argue, one's very right wing and one's very left wing. Both these dudes, I love both. I love both
guys. And I actually understand the perspectives of both of them. And so the conversation was actually about welfare and taxes and my left-leaning friend was, you know, they were kind of
“arguing at first. And, you know, you should be paying your fair share. You don't want to help the”
under privilege. You don't know what this is like. And the other guy's like, wait a minute, you shouldn't be lazy and you should get a job and it should be temporary in the normal position. They're both really getting ingrained in it. It's like because of your work, I'm like, wait a minute. And the one guy that was for welfare, I said, I said, John, I said, brother, really. What's the story? Like, why are you so passionate about that welfare should exist, right? God wanted to grill the bridge between these
dudes. And anyway, John, who, by the way, you resemble John, visually. John says, he's a really strong, masculine guy and he goes, well, man, you guys don't know this, but I was on welfare. It was a little boy and saved my family. And there was a time where, as a little boy, I was actually with my mother on the street begging for money. So we could eat. And it was a horrible existence. And I was a scared little boy. And it was traumatic for me. And thank God, my mother got on welfare.
“And you know what? My mother stayed on welfare for quite a while. And my mom didn't really”
turn her life around, but I did. And now I'm a major league tax player. And I know you buddy, over there on the right side, like all the taxes I'm playing. But you don't know what it's like, not to have food. You don't, and I watched him tell the story. And I had to force it. And I watched my right-leaning friend listen. And the judgment level, which is what you talk about, the judgment level was so far reduced. Where this is the case, ironically, where the story served us.
Yeah. And because he, I kind of forced it because your work to listen. And that kind of comes from questions. And it goes to my next point with you. Talk about triggers often. This welfare conversation from my friend was a trigger while he was getting angry with the right-leaning friend. Like, you're not sensitive. You don't care. He's triggered by that thing. Before we start the interview with my next guest, just want to remind you all that you can subscribe to the show on
YouTube or follow the show on Apple or Spotify. We have all the links in our show notes.
You'll never miss an episode that way. Now on with the show. Hey, welcome back to the show,
everybody. I'm honored to have this man here for the second time. The first time he was on the show, I sought him out saying, please come on the show because his book had made such an impact on me. And now he's got a new book out, by the way, before I introduce him called super communicators, how to unlock the secret language of connection. And it's a topic, as you all know, that I am fascinated by, because I talk a lot about it on the show, except he's way more qualified.
And the reason he's way more qualified than me is this guy is a Pulitzer Prize winning writer. He's a New York Times best selling author. And he's a renowned expert on habits. And also now, after reading his work, he's an expert on communication. So Charles, do we welcome back to the show? Thank you for having me on. This is such a treat for me. Yeah, I love it. You're going to listen to
“a big brain today, everybody, on a topic that you need to know more about. I got to tell you why I love”
your book so much. We were just talking about kids off camera. Yeah. There's a few things I want my kids to have left my house with. One, I wanted to have some faith, which is their morals and ethics. I want them to have some work ethic, self confidence. And if I could give them a fourth thing, it would be the ability to be an outstanding communicator. And I just think it's one of the things
that is the most important elements of life. I'm sure you agree. What about difficult conversations?
Yeah. Are those different in nature and are they, I mean, having to, you know, say, listen, your job performance isn't very good or I'm frustrated with you or, you know, something that's, you know, you're going into it. No, I'm cash. I wish I didn't have to have this conversation, but I do. Yeah. Or sometimes they catch you off guard, right? We're like, I'm talking about one thing and all of a sudden I realize your fury is happening. Like I didn't pick up on
that until just now. And so the answer is they abide by the same rules, but the fact that you're in conflict changes the context enormously. Because we were just talking about trust, right? I can establish trust by sharing something about myself. But if you go into a conversation where there's conflict, trust is already out the window, right? Like you're, you're, your, your fighter flight is going off in your head like crazy. You can't trust someone easily just because like they ask you a
question. So, and this has been a focus of a lot of study. How do we make conversations in conflict
better? And there's basically two things. The first one is, I mentioned this looping for understanding,
Right, asking a question, repeating back what you heard, and then, and then a...
That's enormously powerful in conflict. Okay. Because the first thing, the first suspicion I have,
if you disagree with me and we're in conflict with each other is you're waiting your turn to speak. Yeah. You're not hearing what I'm saying, right? You're just waiting there. And like, I'm going to tell you my piece and then you're going to just bulldoze over me and I'm going to bulldoze back. So if you interrupt that by proving you are listening, using looping for understanding to prove, I really want to understand what you're saying. Help me understand. I'm taking a huge amount of mistrust off
the table. The second thing that often happens in conflict and this happens a lot in marriages. This actually comes from marriage therapy and studies of marriage therapy is that it is natural when we feel threatened to want to control things. And the easiest thing to control is the other person. So you tell me your thing and I'm like, no, no, no, you don't know the evidence. Let me show you the evidence. You say something and you're like, I'm not going to be going to listen to this.
“I try and control you. I try and tell you what you should believe, what you should feel. That's”
toxic. In a marriage, that is the thing that destroys marriage. The alternative is, I have a need for control. You have a need for control. We feel threatened. Can we find things to control together? So for instance, can we control the timing of this fight instead of having it at two in the morning? Can we wait till it's 10 a.m. and we're both a little bit more rested? Can we control
ourselves? Can I let you know? I'm going to take a second before I speak and I'm going to think
about what you just said. Can I show you that I'm trying to control myself and invite you to control yourself? And the third thing is we can control the boundaries of the conflict itself. So one of the most toxic patterns in marriages is this thing called kitchen syncing, where we start arguing about like, we're going to go for new years and then like five minutes later, it's like, and your mother hates me and you don't earn enough money and like, why you such a jerk all the
time? Right. So a fight about one thing becomes a fight about everything. The healthy way to do that is to say we need to have a fight like we have a disagreement on something. Let's control the boundaries of it. We're talking about New Year's Eve. If my mother comes up and your money comes up, like we're just going to set it aside. That's another conversation another day. But then when we're controlling these three things, we're controlling ourselves, we're controlling the conversation,
the environment and we're controlling the boundaries of the fight or the conflict. We're controlling those as partners. Right. We're on the same side of the table. We might not agree on the topic or discussing, but you and I are partners now in controlling the right things in this fight instead of trying to control each other. That's outstanding. When you're talking about relationships and family, where my first off, I've made those mistakes. Me too. I'm a pretty good kitchen
“sinker. I think I've gotten better at it. I also think the longer with you, you're with somebody,”
you have more stuff in the sink. It's even more important to avoid that and have that control of the parameters around the conversation. Right. How long have you been married for? I'm 26 years. Okay. So I'm coming up on 20. And I'm sure this has happened to you, but tell me if I'm getting this wrong, which is there are these things. Literally, I can say two words. And I know the entire fight in my wife's head. Right. Sometimes I don't even mean to say them.
I'm just like, I'm like, well, you know, it's because I earn more money than you. And then I'm like, that's weird. I just stepped in it. Like, all a kitchen sinker, all I had to say was literally three words. You brought the whole thing. Yeah. And so the immediate thing I do is, and I'm like, I'm like, I'm sorry. Whoops. Yeah. I did not mean to do that. Like, tell me what you're feeling, because I want to, I want to give you a chance. But like, you know what? I've gotten better at
Charles with my kids, too, of saying, you know what? I'm sorry. Let me take that right back. Whereas before I'd almost double down or they didn't really feel it that bad, it'll it'll be brushed under. And no, sometimes you just have to, in the moment go, I'm going to make that one back. And other, you're connecting with them, but think about the modeling you're doing. Right. You're teaching them how to communicate with other people. Like, I'm absolutely certain
your kids are going to copy that without even realizing it comes from dad. Yeah. That was a great conversation. Be sure to follow the Edmonton show on Apple and Spotify. Links are in the show notes.
You'll never miss an episode that way. Welcome back to the show, everybody. So I'm excited to have
“this man on the show. I think he's got the best energy on all a television. In fact, I was just”
watching him on speak on FS1 about, I don't know, hour and a half ago. I was just literally watching him. So he changed out of those beautiful clothes he was on. He's got a sweat suit for me. So I tells you what he thinks of me. I'm just kidding. I've had his brother on the show Sam. He just comes from a remarkable family. Former NFL linebacker. Sky's done so much Emmy-awid winning series that he's got that he produced called on comfortable conversation with a black man at a great
Book called on comfortable conversations with a black boy.
so we can just have an uncomfortable conversation and shades of lives. So a manual, I'll show welcome to the show. My brother, I've heard nothing but good things. I call you a brother because you've had my brother on my blood brother, Sam Macho. I'm your alls conversation was fantastic. So I am looking forward to this dialogue, dude. I don't talk often outside of my sports show, but when I find genuine people and meaningful people, dude, I'm excited. Well, I'm grateful
“for that. Here's one of the things I reason why I think people have a hard time being persuaded.”
I want you to speak to this and it's that if they change their point of view, they've disrespected their tribe or the group they're a part of. You know, and there's a lot of pressure on certain, you're really smiling. There's a lot of pressure on certain people. There is for me in my role. Steven will tell me, he goes, look man, I'm on television and an issue that comes up about race. He goes, well, I'm on the air. I'm getting text messages from different people. Very significant
people tell him, you better say this. You better do that. And he said, it's difficult for me because if I vary from whatever it is, you can have a political tribe, a racial tribe, a religious tribe, whatever that might be. If I change my mind or I take a position that's not part of my group, somehow I've disrespected or I may lose that group in terms of their loyalty to me. And I really feel like there's a lot of that in life right now because these window friends and these other
people around is like, wow, if I change my mind about this or I let them know, I've changed my mind about this. I've disrespected or I could lose this group of people. And I think that's one of the reasons people neglect to change their mind sometimes. You see some of that and do you struggle with that? That's well said. I see a lot. The reason I do not struggle with that is because I believe that maintaining an ignorant opinion is to disrespect your own intellect. And I would rather
disrespect my quote unquote tribe if my tribe is being ignorant than disrespect my own intellect. If I have now unlocked the aperture of my mind to a new way, to a better way, to a more righteous way, to a more honest way, to a more just way. There is a lot of peer pressure to maintaining ignorance, but how can I maintain ignorance? I believe it was my Angela who said to no better
“is to do better. Like, once you know better, do better. When do you know if you should disengage”
from a conversation? I disengage from conversations when I realize the intention of the other person isn't actually to draw a conclusion. One of my favorite questions to ever ask anybody in life, and it came from Oprah. After I recorded my, I recorded my second episode of Uncomfortable Conversations with the Black Man. I sat down with Matthew McConaughey called me from a no-call or ID number. This is a true story ladies and gentlemen. McConaughey says, "Hey, I want to
sit down with you for your second episode of Uncomfortable Conversations." Mind you, I was producing my self-ad. I rented out a studio space and Austin by myself. I was not yet a mainstay television personality. I literally hired a wedding videographer because I had no video team. I found a friend who shot weddings. I said, "Please stand in, shoot this for me." McConaughey watches the first episode.
It had been seen by 25 million people in five days and he says, "Hey, I want to have a conversation.
I do not know to this day how he got my number." Me and Matthew McConaughey, we sit down for a conversation five days later after that conversation heirs. I got a call from another no-call, I do not wrap it up. I am annual over Winfrey speaking. I say, Oprah, she says, "Yeah, you've free to FaceTime later today. I FaceTime are later that afternoon. Again, true story ladies and gentlemen, she asked me one simple question, add one very simple question,
and I live by this. This brings this conversation full circle." He said, "A manual? What is your intention?" I said, "Oper my intention is to change the world and I truly believe I came." I said, "I'm currently working on writing a book." She said, "Books, I love books."
“And that's why Oprah and I partnered together to write the first several of the uncomfortable”
conversation series. Now, bringing this full circle to answer your question. Incredible.
Incredible. What is the intention of the person I'm talking to? That is how I know when to end a conversation. If the intention of the person is a gotcha moment, I'm out. What do I mean by gotcha moment? Let's speak finally. If the person just wants to try to make me look stupid, I'm out. If the intention of the person is to figuratively speaking dunk on me, if the intention of the person is to be like, "Boom, I got a manual. I'm out.
If the intention of the person is not reconciliation, I'm out. If the intention of the person is not to hear what I have to say, while simultaneously allowing me to hear what they have to say, I'm out." So the best question we can ask anyone during the course of conversation is a question
that Oprah asked me first. What is your intention? When I was really young, I won my first
Incentive trip to go to Hawaii.
And maybe you know who this guy is, but I'll share this with you about intention. So I got out,
“no one worked out back in those days. I'm old enough. And I read this book called The Corporate”
Athlete. This guy didn't grow power. And I'm like, I'm going to be an athlete business man.
Right? I'm going to be one of the first ones. He's like fit and jacked, but in business.
And so I'm running on this beach in the morning. Sun's not up yet. And there's this guy running towards me coming the other way. And I see him. How old I was. I had a Sony Walkman on playing a cassette, so did he. Tell all that. Anyway, this dude's running by me. And I get, he's getting close. I'm like, oh, he's a bald dude. He's got like this hairy back. And I'm like, he's sweating. I'm like, I don't want to bump this guy. And as he runs by me,
I look, it's, it's Dr. Wayne Dyer, who was a hero of mine at the time. One of the great thought leaders, goodman of all time. And I turn out I go, Dr. Dyer to just do your point. And he turns around. He's about maybe like 20 feet from me. I said, you change my life. And he goes, he had a deep voice like me. He goes, I doubt that. He goes, I bet you change your life.
But how did I help you? And he walks towards me. And I end up sitting on the beach that day,
brother, with Wayne Dyer watching the sun come up. At the end of the conversation, just validate your point, he says to me, he goes, Ed, I think you're going to change the world. Now, my young guy at the time, probably he said that to a hundred people, but to me, he had only said it to me. And he goes, it's not because you're talented guy or brilliant or a great communicator, but he goes, I think you are, but he goes, it's become your intentions. He goes, I think you have a good
heart. I think you're a good man. I think you want to make a difference. And he said, would you do me a favor, the rest of your life, would you attach all of your confidence in your worth, not to your abilities or your results, but to your intentions? Because if it's about your abilities and your results, you'll be chasing your tail and letting yourself down all the time. And then he wrote a book
called The Power of Intention. I've never been more convinced of what someone has said on my show than
what you just said right there than any point ever made on the show. Because that is literally been
“the key to whatever limited success I've had in my life is focusing on my intentions at all given”
time. So I just want to acknowledge what you said right there. It's profound and it's brilliant. Very short in our mission here, folks. I'm glad you're enjoying the show so far. Don't forget to follow the show on Apple and Spotify. Links are in the show notes. You'll never miss an episode that way. Welcome back to everybody. You know, we talk a lot on this program about communication. And one of the things we've not covered that is such a critical part of communication,
it may be more important even what you say is your ability to listen to people. It's a huge part of communication. You know, I've taught you before that people don't respond to what they hear or see they respond to how they feel when they interact with you. And one of the best ways to make somebody feel good is that they feel listened to and that they feel heard. And it's one of the skills that I struggle with the most, which is why I'm so excited to cover this with you today because
quite frankly it's something that I've struggled with myself as my ability to just be present and to listen to people. And so like many of the shows, I'm excited to teach these things to you for your own benefit, but it also helps me in owning this material and frankly anything you teach to people you end up owning more yourself. And so very, very excited to cover this with you here today. And like I said, it's not something I've been very good at my entire life as being a great
listener. So I want to get right into it. And what caused me to do the show today is really two things. I had someone join me on my jet a few weeks ago on a pretty long flight. And there was a group of people, but one particular guy who's an entrepreneur. I don't want to say who he is. But he spent a three hours flight with me on my jet. So he spent about three hours with me about a foot and a half from me. And for three straight hours he did not ask me one question about myself. He did not listen to
one thing I had to say, didn't ask me for any advice. And he talked about himself for three hours. And this is somebody prior to that flight that I really liked. I was struck and so were other people in the fight them when they landed. And I don't mean that I'm a big deal or anything like that. But they were shocked by a rising entrepreneur. Wouldn't take advantage of the time of being with me to ask me questions. I think most of you, if we spent three hours together, you'd probably want to
ask me a question or two. And he did not ask me one single question. And he talked about himself and his life and his background and what he had achieved and what he was going to achieve and what he was good at. And all those things and there was probably true. But I found myself when the flight was over to quite honestly not liking him quite as much as I did before the flight. Because people don't like to hear about you all the time. People want to feel heard. They want to feel listened to.
And he didn't do any of that. The entire flight, plus a fact, he didn't learn anything that flight. So remember this, I know there's the old adage that you have two eyes and two ears and one mouth
“for a reason. And you ought to use them in that ratio. But really you should even use the, you should”
use your mouth even less. And so the two things happened on that flight. One, he didn't get anything out of it. He didn't learn anything. And two, it made the people around him quite frankly not care for him to the extent they could have because he's a really good guy. But he just talked the entire time. And I don't think he did it out of ego. I think he did it because he was nervous. And so that's one thing I want you to check in the very beginning. When you get nervous, I do. When you
Get nervous, do you begin to talk more?
learn to listen more. And people say all of the time, one of the reasons they like my show is I seem so excited and so interested in what people are saying. Because I sincerely am, I've learned that being a great listener is easier than being a great talker. Because being a great listener, the pressure is off you to come up with a perfect thing to say. Right? The perfect response, the perfect phrase that sounds smarter or better than somebody, you don't have to do that when
you're a great listener. And people's favorite topic, number one, remember this. People's favorite topic is themselves. They love to talk about themselves. One of the things I found over and over in my life and my friends are going to kick out of this. But when I play golf, you know, you'll spend four or five hours with somebody when you're on a golf course. And oftentimes my friends will tell me, man, Dave really liked you Ed. Like he really enjoyed the time with you Eddie. So much. But he doesn't
know anything about you. And one of the reasons they like me so much is I don't talk about myself. I love to talk about them. I love to ask questions about them. And so it's interesting. When we're done, they really, really like me. And they know nothing about me. And they wonder why they like me. But the reason they like me is I allowed them to talk about themselves. Plus the fact the way I look at life, I already know about me. I'm not going to learn anything else by talking about myself. I'm
“going to learn by asking them questions about them. And so I think being a great listener has lots”
of benefits. One, people will like you more. Two, you're going to learn more. Three, it takes the
pressure off you. And so listening skills are so critical. And even as we cover that you may say,
I'm a great listener. Well, let's go through some things and see how good we all are because even on my show, I'll be honest with you. I watch replays back of my show. And I interrupt too much. I jump into much. I finish people's sentences for them too often. And that's an ego thing. Almost like I think I can say it better than them. In fact, I'm so bad at it. I'll be honest with you. Before every show, I tell him, hey, this isn't like any other interview you've been on before.
I'm going to interrupt you. You can interrupt me. We'll make it like a real conversation. And all of my guests always politely say, wonderful. That's great. I want you to cut me off. But the truth is, that's not how a great conversation goes. It's not two people interrupting each other all the time. It's one person talking. Another person listening until they're finished speaking. And then responding. So this is something I'm not very good at. And so I teach this to you today,
not being critical of you. But knowing that it's something I'm going to have to get better at myself.
So here we go. Let's talk about some critical steps of being a great listener. You know, there's this thing that's out there too that says, hey, when you're speaking to a woman, she doesn't want you to solve her problems. She just wants you to listen to her. You've all heard this before, right? Man, that's different. Let me tell you, none of this stuff is gender specific. It's not true at all. Nobody wants you to solve their problem necessarily. Not right away. Everybody wants to be
heard. Everybody wants to be listened to. Everybody likes to talk about themselves. And so just
“please remember that. This is not gender specific. Men and women aren't different on this.”
Men like to be heard as well. Men like to be important. Men like to be funny. Men like to be interesting. Men want to share their ideas and thoughts and worries and fears with other people
just like women do. So remember this. You don't always want to just go solve their problem right
away. Next thing is this, always be asking people for understanding. So that when they say something, when they're finished speaking, ask them. So what I think you're saying is, or what I'm hearing is, or clarify this for me, because this shows how deeply you were listening. When you ask for clarification, and what I'm hearing is, by the way, when you say the sentence to somebody, so what I'm hearing is, that lets them know you were hearing them, that you were listening to them.
So as I was listening to you, this is what I understood. Help me understand, clarify for me. Because this gives a deeper sense you were listening to somebody. The next thing is what I'm doing right now with you. Make eye contact. Look right at them when you're talking to them. Don't be distracted. Don't look around. Don't look at your phone. The way you tell me I'm important is by looking at me. I have a significant person in my life and one of the things that
drives me crazy is I'm always saying, are you listening to me? And she's always like, yes, of course I'm listening to you. And I'm like, well, could you look at me and let me know you're listening to me. I'm not going to say who that is either. But we all have that person in our life who they're listening, but they don't know to let us know they're listening. One of the best ways you can do that is by just
“looking right at somebody nodding with them when they say something you agree with, right?”
Smiling when it's funny. Like giving a normal response, you'd say, well, this is basic stuff. You'll be surprised how often you look away. How often you're not focused. The next thing is check your body language. Are you leaning in? Are you welcoming? Are you warm? Or are your arms cross when you're talking to somebody? See, I have this tendency when I'm really listening. I get really drawn in. One of the things I do is I get very serious. And I almost begin to grimace and
make a face because I'm so interested. I'm in deep thought. But what happens is my visual on my face doesn't indicate to them that I'm enjoying what they're saying or that I'm listening very deeply. So make sure that your facial expression is making basic. But your facial expression matches the moment. Matches the emotion. Some other people do something different. They're always smiling when something very serious is being said. That's not an appropriate facial expression. And it looks like you're
Not listening or a disconnects the connection, if you will.
person. So check your facial expressions. Make sure you're looking at them. Check your physiology
in your body language. The next thing is that when someone's talking the highest form of listening is to let them finish their sentence. Do not interrupt them. Do not interrupt them. I do this all the time when I get excited. Oh really? Almost like I want to jump in and get my point in before they're finished or I want to sound smarter or if I don't say it now I'm going to forget to say it. Probably the number one weakness in my ability in listening to people is my desire and tendency
“to jump in before they finish their thought. And what that says is my thoughts more important than”
yours. My needs are more important than you. I'm done listening to what you're saying. Be careful to say things like this when they're talking. Uh-huh. Right. Got it. Yeah. Wow. Because with that does is it's called a nudge. You're nudging them along verbally to finish. It's like hurry up.
I got something to say. Uh-huh. Right. And that nudges them verbally. I used to think that those
were things I was saying that confirmed what they were saying, but it was really what it was really happening as I would nudge. Better is that when they're done, you say wow or that's interesting. Or you least respond when they're finished. All responses are wonderful once they're finished speaking. But don't do the verbal nudges that get them to speed up and finish. Don't finish sentences for people next. It's another thing I do. They'll be saying something and they'll be struggling for a
word and I give them the word. Let them find the word. It's their word not yours and you're stealing control of the conversation from them and making them feel like you're not listening to them. Don't finish their sentences. Don't give them better words. Don't talk over them. Don't interrupt them. These are all things that we all kind of do from time to time when we get excited.
I'm not suggesting if someone has make an incredible point that you don't begin to laugh or jump in,
when it's your pattern with somebody, you're not being a good listener. Also, use acknowledgement statements when they're done. I agree. That's wonderful. That's amazing. Congratulations. Like do things like that that acknowledge what they said because when you acknowledge what they've said, they feel open. That's an invitation to say more. But when you don't acknowledge what they've said, you don't give a statement to it when they're done, then they don't feel comfortable continuing to
speak. And so ask probative questions. So when you ask somebody, for example, if they're new to you, do you have kids? They say yes I do. A follow-up question is what are their names? What are their ages? Begin to learn the volley of follow-up questions. The more specific questions you ask, the more what I call follow-up questions. The more and more interested you appear to somebody. Let me give you one more huge thing of being a great listener. Where appropriate you touch somebody.
So when they're talking if they're leaning in an emotional and you grab their hand or you touch their knee or when they're finished speaking, you shake their hand or hug them or pat them on the shoulder. And by the way, this has to be appropriate, especially when you're talking about different genders. Be very careful of this. But one of the ways you anchor in, I'm listening to you, is with a touch and anchors in the emotion. And so I'll often be careful when I shake their hand
of touching them. We're touching their shoulder, hugging them when we're done or patting them on the shoulder or knee or something like that that just acknowledges I'm hearing you. If it's a guy, maybe it's a fist pump or a high five, right? But it acknowledges the listening and it encourages them to continue. So that is a little bit gender specific, but I just want to reinforce to you
“that that just shows your listening. Then there's a series of questions. I think you should”
ask yourself, just sort of a checklist of whether or not you're a great listener. So ask yourself this, in conversations you have, do you intend to do more or less talking than the other person? This is a huge one for me, especially in business or even in social as well. Do I talk more of them in the conversation? If I've come out of a good conversation, I've talked less than the other person has talked. Man, is this a difficult one for me? Particularly when you're in a position
of authority with somebody, when they're asking you a lot of questions and you're just answering, make sure your feeding questions back to them. A great conversation is at least a 50/50 split, but I think the best of them, they've talked more than me. That way, I think I've given them more of my emotion and caring and concern than they've given to me. So ask yourself, what are your ratios and your average conversations? This is true, by the way, and everything, in your business
meetings, in your sales meetings, with your children, with your spouse, with your friends, with someone you're comfortable with for 30 years and someone you've met for 30 seconds, who talks more
“in your exchanges? Number two, when you don't understand what they're saying, do you ask them questions?”
This is such a huge form of connection with people. Oftentimes, if we don't understand something somebody said, we don't ask them a question about it because it may make us look not so smart or not very prepared, but the way that you really indicate I'm listening to you is, can you help me understand this? And you ask for understanding, I didn't understand what that word meant, or I'm not sure who Bill is that you're referring to. Bill who? Right? When you begin to ask questions
of understanding, the connection deepens with that person. Another question to ask yourself is, when you're in a conversation with somebody, do you often try to figure out what they're going
To say before they finish saying it?
you're listening and you're trying to get them to finish speaking so that you can jump in and say
“you're very important thing. So don't be trying to project forward what they're about to say”
because that means you're not listening in the present and there's a disconnect when you do that. So ask yourself this, do I often or ever try to project forward what they're going to say before they've said it? Next, do you find yourself just not paying attention when somebody's speaking to you? I mean, maybe you are looking around or do you find yourself just thinking about other things when people speak to you? This is a value issue. It really means that these other things are
more important to you than what this person is saying and when you begin to build a habit and a pattern of truly not paying attention. One of the reasons I enjoy my interview so much and quite frankly, my connection with my guests are so long lasting after the program is because I am so interested in what they're saying and I'm interested in what all people are saying. If you were my Uber driver, I think my Uber driver is a type man. This guy is overly interested in what I'm saying and my
cameraman Mike is nodding right now because he's been in enough Uber's with me to know. I talk to everybody. I think people are gifts and I believe the way you open them up is by asking them questions. So I don't care if you're a server and a restaurant, my Uber driver, guests on my show who's worth
a billion dollars or the top athletes in the world. My pattern of conversations with people is very
“similar. I'm interested in what they're saying sincerely and I think you should just begin to ask”
yourself that question. Are you sincerely interested in what they're saying? Because they can feel this intuitively. Another thing to ask yourself is in a conversation. Can you intuitively sort of tell the difference between what somebody is saying and what they really feel? Why is this so important? Because oftentimes people wear social masks with us don't they? And they'll tell us, frankly, that just aren't true or don't completely confirm the way they're feeling about something.
And so a deep, deep level of listening is you can almost feel what they really sense about something or what they're really feeling, not just listening to the words. This is a way of connecting with someone. They don't even know you're connecting with them. But with their words, don't match their feelings. And when you can connect with their real feeling, man, have you not only got influence over them? But most importantly, you've got a connection with them.
Next one, in conversations with people, do you find yourself finishing their sentences or supplying them with better words? Don't do that. I have this mistake sometimes where I finish
“their sentence for them. And I think, oh, we're connecting. I'm with you. That's not what it does.”
It disconnects you from somebody. When you use a better word or a different one, they say, you know what? I really was just, just really said, oh, you were just really bummed out. And you've rephrased something for them. Another way of listening, the wrong way I think is, do you sometimes only hear the facts and details they're given and not listening for the emotion behind it? Just listening for the emotion from somebody gives you a much deeper level
of connection with them than just listening to the facts and figures. This is important, especially in sales when someone's giving you facts and figures back. If you can connect with the emotion of it, big, big difference. Lastly, do you struggle with seeing things when that person's perspective like really connecting with them, really empathizing with them, really believing in them? This is so important when you're listening to somebody is to really try to connect with
their point of view. Because the way you help influence me is if I can meet you where you are, I can take you where we need to go. But if I can't meet you where you are by letting you use your words, your emotions, listening for the emotion behind it, really listening for your point of view. Maybe you sell cars, for example, as persons had a really traumatic time buying cars in the past. They're very skeptical about it. You've got to be able to see it from their point of view.
This is true with getting your children to behave differently or interacting with your spouse.
It's critical that you meet with them where they are and take them where you're going.
So why are all these skills so important, especially from a business perspective? Because this has been very detailed, very granular. The reason it's so important is because truly influence somebody, they have to trust you. And the way you do that is by building rapport with them. So one of the things I used to do incorrectly is, I brought all this massive energy, every people saying, you've got to bring the most energy. The highest energy
person does win. But the way that you really influence somebody is by connecting with them and listening and then matching them physically and their tonality as well. So when I talk back with somebody, I listen for their tonality. I listen to the volume of their voice, the pace of their voice, how they speak. I begin to try to match by listening to them, the words they use, the tonality they use and the volume they use. If they use a certain set of words from time to time, if you
were listening closely, if you then use some of those same words back to them, you connect. So this is a form of influence. If this person sort of repeatedly use the words literally, literally, you've heard that word three or four times. When I'm then going to be saying my stuff back then to influence them, I'm going to use the word literally. This is a connection word. It's part of the words they love. When I use words they love, I can influence them. This is
a huge thing in influence, in closing, in moving people to make decisions that are best for themselves. If they talk at a pace like this, just like I'm talking at this pace right now,
I'm talking like this very fast, I break connection and we can't have rapport.
So I want to listen for the pace that they speak at, the cadence, also the tonality.
“You know, they talk kind of hunched over and quiet. I want to talk like that and a little bit better.”
If they talk at a certain volume, if they talk like this, I don't want to talk like this. The same time if they talk like this, I don't want to talk like this. I wasn't listening for their volume level. We want to match their volume level. And so when you begin to match and mirror like this, use the words they use just a few of them. Don't overcook it. But when they've got three or four words they use and use one or two of those words, I can promise you you connect.
When you speak at a similar pace to them in tonality, you connect. When you speak at a similar volume to them, you connect. If there are hand gestures, as I'm listening and observing them, they use. If they're constantly folding their hands like this, if you're on audio, I'm folding my hands right now. They pray or they have their hands down or they do some sort of a gesture with their hands or shoulders. I will often times I'm watching. This is manipulation. This is connecting
with people. I'm listening so closely. I can see their physical moves as well. If there's emotions, I hear them go too often, which is regret or sadness. Let's just say. They keep telling me stories about things they regret or they're sad of. I will share with them one of the things I regret and bring them with me. If they talk about past achievements or they talk about material things, then I'll talk about some material things or past achievements. I'm listening
for them to give me the language, the words, the tonality that I can move them with. And this is also true in every area, but particularly in influence when we're trying to persuade people. So the reason this is so important is people have go too words. And so if you're really listening closely, not only are you connecting better with me, but they will tell you the three or four words they use a lot. Every human being does this by the way, you do it too. You have a few words
you use more than most. And if someone's really listening closely, they can hear what those words are. And if I use one or two of those words back with you, I've connected with you on a deeper level. The next thing that's huge by the way in listening is to repeat back to them what you believe they've just said, repeat back to them what you've heard. This is what I've heard. This is what I'm hearing. This is what I'm listening to. This is true when I'm interacting with my children.
Before I just tell them I want to do something, I listen to them and I say, here's what Daddy's
hearing. Is this true? And this really bothering you regularly. Is this something? So what I'm listening to them, they know I'm listening. Use acknowledgment statements. It's not done enough. People love to be complimented. I love to be complimented. You do. So after I've listened to
“you, after you've told me what you need to tell me, I want you to learn this sentence,”
everybody right now. I just want to acknowledge you. I think you're amazing. I think you're incredible. Thank you for sharing this with me. That's awesome. And it might be with guys, you don't say that, hey, bro, that was cool. Thanks, man. Man, I always love connecting with you, brother. You're my brother, right? Always do a connection statement. Always do what I'm going to. That's why I love you, man. Whatever it is, you know, people talk differently depending on who
they're around. Someone even known 30 years different than someone even known 30 minutes. But the
fact of the matter is, I always do connection. I love you, brother. Thank you so much. That's why
we're so close, man. That's why I love being around you. Whatever it is, you begin to say acknowledgement statements to somebody because it connects the conversation. It's what I call a post-frame. After someone said something, the last thing I want you to focus on, children, spouse, business, brand new person in a social environment, or someone you know in 30 years, acknowledge them. Thank you. That was awesome. Great meeting you, if they're new, right?
I can have a new ego. Man, I enjoyed our time so much. Thank you. That's post-framing what we just
“talked about. If it's someone I've been with a long time, say, brother, man, that's why I love you,”
that's why I love you. And then other people, it's like, that's the only one that's inspired me. You fire me up. Thank you. I love how vulnerable you are. Whatever it is, I just want to acknowledge you. I just want to tell you how much I appreciate you. I just want to thank you. I just want to tell you you're awesome. I just want to tell you I believe in you. Do an acknowledgement statement that post frames what you've covered. And I promise you, you've now put a bow around one of being one of the
great listeners that anyone will ever be around. It's going to make you one of the most well-liked and most influential people that you know. And by the way, isn't that we're after in life being well-liked and being influential? And that usually comes down not to be an incredible orator, but being an incredible listener. And these are the skills and these skills matter in every area and building a church, and building a boy scout troop, and building a softball team,
and building a business, and building any family, anything in life is that we want to be
able to be liked and have influence. And that always comes down to what we make people feel
and more of an anything people feel great when they've been able to talk about themselves. But most importantly, they feel listened to, connected with, and acknowledged. Listen to, connected with, and acknowledged. This is how we have influence over people. This is also how we make a difference in people's lives. The final piece of the puzzle is this, is that because of social media, we have such an advantage. And I just want to tell you something that doesn't happen enough,
but when it has happened for you, man does it feel like the connections even deeper. It doesn't matter what it is, is that when your separation from that person takes place and they leave you, especially if they don't live with you, whether that be a client, a best friend, a new friend,
Or someone you just met, following up a little while later with a text that j...
"I enjoyed our time so much. I enjoyed listening to you. Thanks for sharing this with me."
“And maybe repeating back to them what you heard a little bit of. And when you do that,”
it's some mention them. Not only did he listen to me, or she listened to me in my presence,
but they continued to listen to me after I was gone. They continued to connect with me.
“And this extends the connection and deepens the connection. When after you physically separated,”
and even by the way, if this communication happened by phone, and you weren't physically with them. For you to follow up after a phone call with a text a few hours later that just says,
“"Man, I enjoyed the talk so much. Thanks for sharing that with me." Always love when we”
connect or you always make me laugh or I'm so glad we're new friends now. I feel like I've made
a new friend. Whatever it is, you strengthen and deepen the connection with people. By letting them know later, "Hey, I heard you. Hey, I listened to you." So not only doing great in their presence, but later confirming for them, "I was with you. I heard you. I enjoyed it. I want to acknowledge you. Man, have you deep in the fact that you listened to them?" [Music]


