Conversation makes the world go around. We would be nowhere without it.
The bigger question is, what conversations do you have with
yourself about the meaningful conversations you are having in your world and HOW does that play a part in your
claiming your “True Self” or your “Authentic Being?”
I thought I would do this blog for those of you who keep
hearing …
“You must be your true self” – but no one is telling you HOW
to deal with conversation, as you become exactly that.
In everyday conversation, you may encounter a colleague, a
friend, a family member, a neighbor, or even a stranger on the street or at an
event where a discussion may begin that you believe dives into a pool of
opinion that differs from your daily chatter.
Here you may discuss big things like politics, world issues,
the environment, economics, finances, religion, corruption, human rights, and
global change.
OR
Sometimes you may have a simple conversation about food,
traffic, animals, or daily human relationship problems where there is applied
meaning to deeper issues beyond the conversation itself.
For those of you working on authenticity in communication,
sometimes your own thoughts, psyche, heart, and soul communications may not be
received in the light you were hoping (or intending), therefore forcing you
from your own expression in being your ‘true self.’
This is
counterproductive.
While
hypersensitivity is key, empathy and compassion is essential, sometimes
navigating this space is very challenging for those who avoid going deeper to
comprehend what they are actually dealing with in conversation … beyond the
actual discussion.
Your first reaction may be to retreat and go back to your
old ways.
- Do you really want to do this?
- Do you really want to be censored, silenced or shushed?
- Do you wish to no longer participate?
- Do you wish to “blow off” a conversation merely because you cannot handle someone else’s truth as you try to deal with your own?
- Do you wish to choose to be a victim because others don’t ‘see,’ ‘hear,’ or relate to you?
This isn’t the kind of depth most people think about, beyond
their own personal opinions, values, perception and stand.
Everything on the conversation table is never ‘absolute’
except within someone’s perception, which has the ability and capacity TO
CHANGE. AND… it has the potential to
GROW…and EVOLVE.
Why is that?
Most will look at this kind of discussion in the following
categories:
- · To agree
- · To disagree
- · Or to agree to disagree
This is usually where people stop linking to the depth of
their own perception, because if they stop at any one of the above three
points, they are missing an opportunity to go even deeper as to how they arrived to any of the points above.
Where you believe there are differences, and perceive there
are differences – they may or may not be just on the surface level, or as
monumental as you think (with your own lens).
Where the similarities reside are within people wanting to:
- · Talk
- · Share
- · Express
- · Exchange
When we get ‘stuck’ in ‘differences’ and make ‘differences’ wrong
is where judgment enters the picture.
When you sit in judgment, nothing can get resolved because
you remain fixated on this, rather than understanding something, even if it doesn’t
jive with who you are and your own beliefs, values, principles, morals, ethics
and choices.
Instead, when you focus on SIMILARITIES – of “wanting to be
your authentic self” realizing the other person you are having a conversation
with, also wants the same thing for themselves….
IT IS HERE YOU HAVE A FOUNDATION TO BEGIN A CONVERSATION.
Rarely do others dive in deeper to “understand WHY” someone
may think, feel or come to believe something OR WHERE that came from, and HOW
they arrived into thinking/feeling and IF it was….
- · Developed over time
- · Shaped from selective media
- · Absorbed from their environment of influence
- · Learned
- · Evolved from exposure to acquired experiences
Only when we can understand this, can we even begin our
journey to LINKING to individual depth perception. Then from here, we are able
to begin to comprehend another’s beyond just words, thoughts, and feelings.
People in general have different comfort zone levels when it
comes to conversation.
Some people also have hidden agendas for discussion when it
isn’t the discussion itself, but rather to somehow reinforce, validate or confirm
other questionable things they have been in limbo confirming within themselves,
and their own minds as they become their ‘true self.’
Sometimes truths are hesitant to be revealed. Sometimes
reality is merely a façade.
The ‘taboo’ subjects in different cultures vary and when we
think of culture, we also need to think about how we relate accordingly.
What is offensive to some, may not be to others – but it is
here you must tread carefully,
because greater misunderstandings may occur.
What is considered appropriate to some, should never be an
assumed ‘blanket’ of understanding across the board without further
examination.
But what is ‘taboo?’
Is this subjective? Is it
case-by-case?
Yes, it is.
- Think back to your household as a child - What was forbidden to be discussed at the dinner table?
- Is it different from what was permitted to be discussed outside of the doors of your home?
- Did you again become confused about varying environments of “outside the home” and what that actually meant?
- In other words, was the conversation you were allowed to have in school different from the one in church or in a supermarket or at a company picnic or family reunion?
- Then when you entered the workforce, there were again – a different set of rules, right?
Most likely, your ‘conditioning’ for what was allowed is
embedded within your behavior and subconscious thoughts/reactions.
Even if you have worked on yourself, there are threads of
this still lingering within your default to someone else’s words, thoughts, or
actions.
Much of this has to do with the variables of culture,
generation, gender, life experience, temperament, emotional behavior, and
knee-jerk reflex/protection mechanisms, and of course defaults from childhood
upbringing, transference of learned behavior, and the self-imposed expectations
you put on yourself and others to show up in how they deliver opinions,
thoughts, and feelings. This of course translates to action, expression and
choices (sometimes limited, not fully explored and/or isolated perspective).
Whew! This is a lot
to process, right?
Is peace possible in a world of having to navigate all of
these waters?
How about within your own immediate world/circle?
Differences in communication styles are a learning
opportunity for all people involved, not just the one who is merely frustrated
that they are not understood the way they believe they should be by everyone.
- Relating is more than a two way street of talking and listening.
- Relating is more than a two way street of thinking vs. feeling.
- Relating also requires solutions and tools used for specific situations when points are not clearly articulated, as to what course of action is required or how what was delivered was received by the sender’s intent.
How do you move past a missed communication artery blockage?
Where do you begin the healing and better communicative
bridge to growing past what it is that you perceive?
Active participation is required.
Shutting off communication entirely never resolves
understanding.
Sure, you can use this time to comprehend your own depth
perception (and this time is useful),
but you cannot sit alone with it and not articulate it clearly when there is a
missed connection.
Sometimes silence for you, may not come across correctly as
the one on the other end only hearing silence.
This is an opportunity to learn and grow, expand your own
consciousness in problem solving to improve your own communication development.
This reflection includes the communication you have with
yourself, as well as with whomever you are relating with/to and trying to
achieve heightened comprehension.
It cannot be one-sided digging excavation for one person to
try to figure out ‘what is wrong’ any more than it can be one-sided for another
to hope clear communication is received and assume all has been properly
conveyed with knowing what to do and how to show up.
Not all brains process information the same way. This is a
fact.
Some brains do not inject immediate interpretation from the
other’s point-of-view, even if they understand how someone else may be feeling.
Most times, the only point-of-view that can be easily
digested is what is perceived from the other person’s depth perception, but you
have to first know HOW one arrives at their own conclusions before you can make
one of your own based simply on how you are feeling.
How do you LINK to another’s perception about how far they
are taking matters to heart?
The simple answer is that you can try to walk in someone’s
shoes, through empathy and compassion, understanding and with as much clarity
as you can muster, but if your own brain and heart only have a certain library
points of reference to relate to, there will be things missed in communication.
Solution:
·
Think clearly about what it is you wish to
resolve.
·
Ask yourself what you hope to accomplish within
this understanding.
· Then consult your TRUTH – want and need.
- Is it to be understood?
- Heard?
- Felt?
- Do you wish for empathy?
- Sympathy?
- Do you need a sounding board to vent?
- Do you need space to breathe?
- Do you need time to sort through the dialogue in your head?
- Are you seeking validation?
- Reinforcement?
- Support?
- Do you merely need compassion?
·
Create a tool to use for your thoughts without
attaching ego.
·
Develop a pathway to bridge what you wish to
understand.
·
Come to a mutual position of takeaways from the
dialogue.
This is just a starting point. However, it will begin a conversation I hope
we can continue.
Hit me up on social media and let’s begin a conversation!
Namaste.