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IDEAS
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INSPIRATION
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INSIGHTS

“It is not the answer that enlightens, but the question.”

- Eugene Ionesco

Ask, Listen, Understand

February 27, 2021

“Listening is an activity. It's not passive. We are creating the world by listening all the time.” – Julian Treasure

It is a busy, noisy world – within and without. Searching for clarity, focus and answers in circumstances, other people and “someday” destinations, we come up empty again and again, pivoting to the next scheme, shortcut or workaround with a continued external focus.

By adding more to the overflowing piles of starts and stops, we blur and block any chance for clarity of thought and simplicity of direction, our true north. The answers and insights that we seek externally are actually rooted within, in our own intuition, dreams and inklings.

Pause daily, take inventory and create order from what already exists. Start from where you are right now and move forward, a step at a time. Ask questions and wait quietly and openly for answers to enter. Invite them in, seek understanding through inquiry.

The concept of appreciative inquiry was developed by David Cooperrider and Suresh Srivastav in the early 1990’s. The five original principles include:

  1. Constructionist: WORDS CREATE WORLDS

  2. Simultaneity: INQUIRY CREATES CHANGE

  3. Poetic: WE CAN CHOOSE WHAT WE STUDY

  4. Anticipatory: IMAGE INSPIRES ACTION

  5. Positive: POSITIVE QUESTIONS LEAD TO POSITIVE CHANGE

Through the years, additional principles have emerged including:

  1. Wholeness: WHOLENESS BRINGS OUT THE BEST

  2. Enactment: ACTING ‘AS IF” IS SELF-FULFILLING

  3. Free choice: FREE CHOICE LIBERATES POWER

  4. Narrative: STORIES ARE TRANSFORMATIVE

  5. Awareness: BE CONSCIOUS OF UNDERLYING ASSUMPTIONS

By employing appreciate inquiry principles along with active listening, the right actions become apparent and clarity unfolds naturally. Clarity coming from asking and action, from finding out what works and what doesn’t work through implementation and execution.

Birgit Ohlin, MA, BBA, Coach offers six tips for active listening that are valuable to listening to others as well as yourself: 

  1. Nonverbal involvement – eye contact, nodding head;

  2. Pay attention to the speaker, not your own thoughts;

  3. Practice Non-Judgment;

  4. Tolerate silence;

  5. Paraphrase;

  6. Ask questions

Julian Treasure’s 5 Ways to Listen Better Ted Talk offers simple exercises to improve conscious listening by paying attention to the quiet, the subtle and understated to access understanding:

  1. Silence - just three minutes a day is a wonderful exercise to reset your ears and to recalibrate, so that you can hear the quiet again;

  2. "The mixer” - listen to how many individual channels of sound can that you can hear. It's a improves the quality of your listening;

  3. Savoring – enjoy mundane sounds and find the "hidden choir" that’s around us all the time.

  4. Listening position – play with filters as levers to get conscious. Filters include active/passive; reductive/expansive; critical/empathetic;

  5. RASA – receive, appreciate, summarize and ask

Weave quiet into each day, ask questions to foster clarity and insight to inform meaningful action that creates progress.

“When you quiet your mind, you can enter a world of clarity, peace and understanding.” – Alice Coltrane

In Insights Tags appreciative inquiry, questions, clarity

“What is now proved was once only imagined.”

―William Blake

!MAG!NAT!ON !mperative!

April 11, 2020

“If you fall in love with the imagination, you understand that it is a free spirit. It will go anywhere, and it can do anything.” ―Alice Walker

If you feel lost, overwhelmed and have no idea where to start to tap into this “open” time, it is completely understandable. Going from a hundred miles per hour to five miles per hour is not a simple, easy, “one-step” shift. Combined with additional responsibilities of home schooling, checking off the household project “to do” list and 24/7 “together” time, we have many factors pulling on us right now. We are the same people in a foreign land expecting to “learn the language” immediately. When we can’t control our external circumstances, it’s best to spend our time adapting and adjusting our internal state – our expectations, motivations and behavior.

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In Insights Tags imagination, appreciative inquiry, optimism, design thinking, innovation

Get in touch with Kathie of Start 3 Things at kathiep@start3things.com