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Article Title: Make Friends by Listening to Them: Three Easy Steps
Author: Laurie Wilhelm
Category: 
Word Count: 482
Keywords: active listening, hearing, social skills, interpersonal skills, good 
relationships, focusr on others
Author's Email Address: [email protected]
Article Source: http://www.articlemarketer.com
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"The less you speak, the more you will hear." - Alexander Solzhenitsyn

Throughout our schooling, we've taken classes to learn and improve our writing 
and reading skills. Unfortunately, we received little encouragement to develop 
and refine our listening skills and, as a result, we've become a society of 
talkers with few people to listen. Knowing how to listen well is one of the 
most valuable and useful of all the interpersonal skills. It rarely comes 
naturally and it requires the same attention and effort to effectively develop 
it as any other skill.

There are three basic and fundamental steps to be an effective listener:

1) Stop talking.
It's impossible to listen to someone else over your own voice and it's not 
possible for you to be completely focused on the speaker if you're talking at 
the same time. 

In the words of Albert Einstein, "If A equals success, then the formula is A 
equals X plus Y and Z, with X being work, Y play, and Z keeping your mouth 
shut."

2) Don't interrupt.
Sometimes it can be almost unbearable not to interrupt a speaker when something 
he said reminded you of a story, anecdote or experience. Or perhaps he touched 
a nerve or brought up a topic on which you hold a strong opinion and you're 
itching to speak. 

Interrupting is distracting and constant interrupting is annoying to the 
speaker and the other participants in the conversation. It's also plain rude. 
The thing is, you can tell your story or give your opinion after the speaker 
has finished, so there's really no need to interrupt.

If you do interrupt, as soon as you realize it, just apologize and invite the 
speaker to continue what he was talking about by saying something like, "I'm 
sorry, I interrupted you. Please go on with what you were saying." The speaker 
will usually thank you for the consideration (if he has good social skills) and 
continue. You may find that the speaker, once he's finished, will turn to you 
and ask that you finish saying what you started.

3) Concentrate on the speaker.
Look at her, make eye contact and focus your attention on what she's saying. 
Don't have another conversation going on in your mind. Don't gaze around the 
room to see what other people are doing. Don't start fiddling with something in 
your hand. Don't pick up a pen and start doodling. Don't allow yourself to be 
distracted. Just pay attention to the person speaking, hear the words she's 
saying - and listen.

The Good Listener Advantage
"A good listener is a silent flatterer' - Proverb

Good listeners attract people to them because they know that by listening, they 
actively demonstrate attention, respect, and interest. Everyone wants to be 
heard, even the most quiet people. If you want to make new friends or improve 
the relationships you already have, put some more effort into your listening 
skills and watch how much better your relationships become.

Laurie Wilhelm manages the Express Yourself to Success website. Achieve success 
faster and easier using good communication and interpersonal skills. Get your 
free eBook, What You Need to Succeed: Social Skills, now by going to 
http://www.expressyourselftosuccess.com.
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