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  • "Old Boy... is it a guy trapped in a room?"

  • "Yeah, yeah, yeah... basically. It has a twist-- just wait for the end of it."

  • It can be painfully rare to end up in a satisfying conversation. A lot of the time, we talk and we listen,

  • but sincere, deep connection eludes us.

  • "Oil, the yeast and pan... it reacts differently and some more healthy or less. I-- like, grapeseed oil is actually

  • really... I like that. I mean it's very..."

  • We shouldn't blame ourselves for the difficulties we face in conversations. After all, no one ever particularly

  • taught us how to have a conversation, though it might have have helped.

  • "This is the, um, well it's not the orbital, is it? It's the other one. [incoherent]

  • Well, there's people trying to get to work, people trying to get to school, I mean, so-- it's just so stupid."

  • Too often, when we meet and talk, we stay on the surface of events. We say what happened, where we

  • went, who we saw; not how we felt, or what it meant to us. We talk about facts, not feelings, which are the only

  • conduits to real connection.

  • "... thing-- that's the issue. It's like when you're on that platform you see there's Royston, Natural Garden City,

  • and Welling Garden City. And that's the thing-- a lot of people are there on that platform and they don't know

  • that they could change your Alexandra Palace..."

  • Or else, we insist rather than explain feelings, thereby failing to get them into other people's minds.

  • "... like so amazing. I still got like-- even thinking of it now, it's just like... UHHH! Uh... you know the...

  • yeah, you know when you're kind of... oh, God it was great. Oh, so good."

  • Typically, we skirt the raw and intense emotions and head for safe, but bland, adminstrative chat.

  • "I used to eat meat... and then, obviously when the [incoherent] and I became vegetarian. I've found...

  • just absolutely the most amazing recipe book. It's literally-- I don't know if you've seen it and it's got like--

  • you can replace... sort of the dish that you would have with me in it..."

  • Or else, we simply can't keep a conversation on track. We repeatedly, as it were, open new windows,

  • digressing until the thread is lost.

  • "So I was thinking-- I was actually thinking of playing poker this weekend with uh... you know, my mates,

  • but I don't play anymore because I lost a bit of money last year, and I know. There's just so much to read now...

  • you know what I mean? I'm more interested in reading, if anything... I am going skiing next week, so...

  • I don't know, it's not the kind of place you might read but..."

  • The good news is that we can learn to shape others' conversations rather than just receive them passively.

  • In a dialogue, there are always what one might term, "conversational crossroads," with paths that lead either

  • to greater intimacy, or else towards ongoing superficiality. Here is one conversational crossroads:

  • "I'm inviting some friends over next week who I haven't seen since uni."

  • At this point, you could go in one of two ways. A surface way:

  • "Oh cool, what university did you go to?" "Manchester."

  • "Oh, yeah, it's really fun. Manchester, yeah. My sister went there. What did you study?"

  • "Business." "What-- what did you do in the second half for?"

  • "Well, I ended up in Events Management, but yeah." "I did French."

  • Or, you could steer things down a more emotional path:

  • "I'm inviting some friends over next week who I haven't seen since uni."

  • "Oh my God, it's like what? 10, 12 years?" "Yeah, that's when I fini-- got my degree, yeah.

  • "So, I mean, you've all completely changed... I mean, you've changed."

  • "Yeah, I guess I have, yeah. I suppose so. Haven't really thought about it that much."

  • "What would you think or say-- I mean, if you could see you then now?"

  • Good listeners are like good editors: trimming away what's superfluous, trying gently to get the speaker to

  • focus on what's really at stake.

  • "And after my mum died, as you can probably guess, there was quite a bit of stress... um. Well uh, not helped

  • by the fact that my favorite football team at the time, Manchester United, was going through a losing streak--"

  • "So, but you were saying that, um, that your parents got divorced and then literally three months later your mum

  • passed away?" "Yes. It was all quite... quite quick."

  • "Yeah." "Um, but yeah. I've got a friend-- uh, Dave, um, or David,

  • as he's called at work, because obviously that's a bit informal--"

  • "Sorry, but you were saying like it just-- like it all happened really quickly and like when your mum went to

  • the hospital you didn't actually know she was ill before..."

  • The other great surprise about conversations is how much we like it when people show vulnerability.

  • We always think that what we need to do to get other people to like us is to show how well things are going

  • for us. Surprisingly, that's actually not very appealing.

  • "It's so well paid, um... and which is great in terms of, you know, now I can afford, you know, to live in

  • Canterbury which is gorgeous and I love my flat, um... so yeah, it's been really, really positive, actually."

  • It's not that we want others to fail; we just need to know that our own sorrows have echoes in the lives of others.

  • That's what connects us; strength may be impressive, but it's vulnerability that builds friendships.

  • "Yes, I guess I've... missed her every day since then... which is mad because, you know, I'm a grown man now...

  • got a responsible job, got a family, got my own home, but when it comes down to it... I just miss my mum."

  • It's so poignant that we make so much effort to come together, but often don't manage to connect.

  • The good news is, we can learn how to. The connections we long for are just waiting for us to make the right

  • moves, to secure them.

  • We believe in making the world a more emotionally intelligent place, and to that end, we've now also

  • published some extraordinary books, as well as other merchandise that reinforces some of the themes

  • illustrated in our videos. Please click on the link below to see more.

"Old Boy... is it a guy trapped in a room?"

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A2 初級 英國腔

如何有一個好的對話 (How to Have a Good Conversation)

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    Amy.Lin 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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