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Listening

Mar 29, 202435 minEp. 102
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Episode description

Listening! What is it? How do you do it? What’s so important about it, and how does it feel? In this episode, Brett and Joe talk about listening, which is a fundamental component of the VIEW mindset and core to living a fully aligned life. They explore what it means to really listen, how it can change your reality, relationships, and business, and share thoughts on what it is as well as what it isn’t. 

Send us your questions on Twitter, through our website, or in our Circle community! 

Joe on X: @FU_JoeHudson 

AOA on X: @artofaccomp 

Brett on X: @airkistler 

Visit Us: www.artofaccomplishment.com

We invite you to experience our work. Reserve your spot at www.view.life/explore

Transcript

Here we are at another episode of Art of Accomplishment and before we get started, I know many of you are looking for people to do this work with and we've created a way for you to find those people. We have several complimentary workshops that give you the opportunity to taste our brand of experiential teachings and meet people who are interested in the same thing. To reserve your spot, visit view.life slash explore or click the link in the show notes.

And you're listening in that attuned way. We evolve. The things that need to come to the surface come to the surface. You unfold quicker. Welcome to The Art of Accomplishment where we explore how deepening connection with ourselves and others leads to creating the life we want with enjoyment and ease. I'm Brett Kistler here today with my co-host, Joe Hudson. So one of the first things that we do in this work is that we teach people how to listen.

And it's also interesting that it's not just one of the first things that happens in the work. It's also one of the things that happens in the middle and later on in some of our more advanced courses, we come straight back to listening. And so we've used the metaphor of the sushi rice before to talk about some of these really basic kind of one-on-ones that aren't really one-on-ones. They're actually some of the whole practice that you just get deeper

and deeper on. And so I'd love to get deeper on the topic of listening today. How's that sound? Yeah, that sounds great. Great. So let's get into it. What in the way that we speak about it in this work, what is listening and what is it not? Yeah, it's a... So here's the weird part about listening is that there's no moment of awake consciousness where you're not listening. So you're always listening to something.

Maybe you're listening to the thoughts in your head or maybe you're listening to the other person or maybe you're listening to the pain in your foot, but your awareness is always on something. So there's a way in which you're always listening. So there's a caliber of listening or there is an attention given to listening that changes a lot. And so just as a very simple experiment, if right now you put all of your attention, if you're listening to this, put all of your attention

on your inner ear. Just like keep all the focus on your inner ear. There's a way in which you're listening to the inner ear, but there's also a way in which you're still are comprehending everything that I'm saying, even though your attention is in your inner ear. And that's a very specific quality of listening. Do another experiment. So instead of listening, you know, paying attention to your inner ear, listening to your inner ear, see what it's like to listen to the silence.

That surrounds my words. That's in between my words or the frequencies that are silent, even when I'm talking. If you put all of your focus on the silence, again, you still understand what I'm saying, but the quality of listening has changed a little bit. When we talk about listening, one of the ways to think about it is we're actually putting our attention to the listening.

We're putting our attention on the listening, which is a very deep receiving, allowing, I get to say, it's like the world is coming to you is the feeling of it if you're really listening. And the other quality of it is that you're attuning, like there's an attunement that happens when you listen. And it happens naturally. You don't have to tell yourself to attune. If you're deeply listening to yourself, you're attuning to yourself. If you're deeply listening to another

person, you're attuning to them. If you're deeply listening to the sensations in your body, you're attuning to that, which means that you're showing up in a way that there's a lot of care, respect, understanding would be some of the things that come out of that naturally.

And so listening is really important. And typically, what happens is when people are listening, they bring other qualities to it, like I'm listening so I can figure out what I'm going to say next, or I'm listening to help fix you or to be of value or to judge you or to, so there's a, or judge myself or fix myself for, and the listening gets diluted by the attention, not just going to listening, but the attention going to, how am I going to interact? What am I going

to do next? What, like, how do I feel safe in this environment? So, and so when we're teaching listening, and as you know, like when we teach, like the first thing that happens, if you're interested in coaching with us at all, is this very long, long, like, set of sessions around listening.

What we're really teaching is that place where you go, where you are, your attention is in the listening, and you're listening to yourself and another person simultaneously, and which is exactly what view is pointing to in, you know, the connection course as well, though we don't talk about listening specifically there very much, it is, it is the same pointer. Yeah, yeah, there's

a lot to unpack from what you just said. There's, there's the tuning, which kind of makes me think of tuning in, like a radio station, like what is it that you're tuning into, or what is the channel that you're listening on, the inner ears, an interesting one, the attention in your feet, also with

the, the intention, are you listening from a place of preparing to respond, from a place of trying to remember what, like the words that are being said are the concepts, which is a very different thing from just letting it land in the body and be, you know, the episodic memory of what was said being lost, but the energetics really landing and being crocked. Yeah, so what are some things that you would say would stand in the way of listening? Yeah, so again, there's one way to think about it,

which is, you're always listening, so nothing can stand in the way of it. And I, and I keep on repeating that because one of the things that the mind will do is it'll make listening a to do a challenge, you have to start trying, and all of that is what gets in the way of the listening. So, so I keep on

saying that. Trying is not receiving. Yeah, exactly. So I keep on saying it's all there all naturally, because that allows you to find the listening more easily, because it's just an allowing, it's just a receiving. Thinking that you have to do something gets in the way of listening. The other thing that gets in the way of listening, and the most deep way of listening is thinking that you have to do something to be valuable or useful or if you really are listening, you'll, what you'll start

noticing is actions arise from the listening. As, you know, instead of from the like, oh, I need to be a value, ooh, I'm scared they're going to get upset at me. Ooh, I'm, right, there's just like this. Yeah. Deep listening. The other, the other thing that gets in the way of it is going into the future in the past, often gets in the way of listening, right? So some way in which you try to manage the future or have managed the past is going to management really in any way gets in the way of

of listening. Yeah, I was going to say everything you just described sounded like a form of management. Listening so that something can happen so that I can respond in a certain way so certain outcomes occur. Listening with an eye towards the future of the past being seen in a certain way or being managed to an outcome. Yeah, like all so listening sounds like it's a, the way of listening that we practice is a non-management way of listening. Correct. And it also creates a deep presence because

it can only happen right now, so which is a state of presence. So and what's interesting is that it's at some point as you really, really learn to listen, listen, you can speak about the future from a deep listening place and you can speak about the past from a deep listening place. But you're not managing the future or managing the past. So, so that's it. And there's a quality.

If you did that experiment about listening to the silence or listening to the inner ear or listening to your body while I'm speaking, you'll notice that there's a kind of a feeling of expansion that occurs. It's almost like your awareness becomes bigger and it becomes more in the forefront. There's more spaciousness that happens. And so there is a somatic experience that goes with like a deep listening. And so your body can recognize what when it's listening in a way that

your mind can't always. Yeah, and I'd like to go a little bit deeper into that because the way that we're often used to listening is to listen conceptually, listen intellectually, listen to ideas or content. And the way that we're talking about it right now is listening with the body, listening with the inner ear, listening with awareness. And can talk a little bit more about how, how you somatically experience listening and how that changes the quality of a conversation or

the quality of the data that you that you gather. Yeah. So on the listening to concepts piece of it, you know, that's what what the mind might be noticing. But the like the the prefrontal cortex might be noticing that. But the we're listening in other ways all the time as well, whether we're conscious of them or not is another thing, meaning like we might not be listening to the fact that our body like totally constricts when someone gets angry at us and we don't want to feel it. And so

we jump on social media because that constriction is like, I want to go on. But our body, there was a listening that happened. You weren't conscious of it that created that outcome. So one of the things that I noticed is that when people are just listening to the concepts, there's a way in which they don't grok the rest of it. But when you when you are listening to the silence of your body, you do grok the rest of it as it turns out. What's interesting about it is you might like your

mind kind of catches up is the experience. In mind is like, huh, like you're kind of like just listening and then all of a sudden you get it instead of you're getting it, getting it, getting it, getting it, getting it, got it. So it's more like the way you would understand a river by just sitting by the river for a while. And all of a sudden you start noticing things like, oh, the eddies happen on the side and the flow happens in the middle and the and there's something that's happening

at a different like the waters move in different pace underneath and it is at the top. You just stuff you can't grok any other way, but just just be sitting by a river. Or like people I know who road rivers for years, they understand a river in a way that a scientist couldn't, they can read the water. And so there's a way that you get things that the mind has to kind of catch up with.

And maybe sometimes doesn't even understand like the way a basketball player might know how to do a fake without fully intellectualizing it, but they know that when they move that little shoulder before they turn left that they always get around the guard or whatnot. So yeah. So there's that aspect of it. I notice that I can listen from a place of awareness and wholeness and silence and I never have a problem grokking information that's being handed to me.

Or I do, but not any more than if I'm fully in my head listening. It just, it's just that it requires me not to worry if I'm getting it. Yeah. If I worry if I'm getting it, then I'm screwed. So it just requires like it's almost like a trust. It's a trust until it's not. It's like I know that this will happen. And then it's like, it's like, it's like, oh, will the ice be cold? I have to trust that the ice is cold. And at some point you're like, ice is cold. I don't need to trust that.

And, but there is that process of learning to trust that just listening will get there. Right. And in some case of that ice for me sometimes feels like the sense of knowing. Like if I'm if I'm listening to you right now from the sense of like, oh, I know what we're talking about. We've been doing a lot of listening together. Then all of your words get filtered through my preconception of what I think you're talking about. And that's a pretty harsh filter. And without that

picture, if I'm sitting in the unknown, I have no idea what Joe's not to say. In fact, you're the internet just cut out a minute ago. And I couldn't hear about 15 seconds of what you said. But I was like practicing the just like being with it and listening. And when you came back, I just felt the energy in your voice. And I was here's where we are. And then was able to continue. Much much more than like, oh, shit, I'm lost. I didn't hear that past 15 seconds.

Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It does the same thing with, oh, I have to get this too. So you're saying listening through the filter of knowing, which is kind of living in the past. I know this thing. It will filter out what you hear. Living in the idea of, oh, I have to get this will also filter out what you hear. And so in a weird way, the deeper forms of listening have less filters on them. Or the filters are more natural. It's a way to express it where it's just like, oh, look at it.

Like my experience is the wider forms of listening, the listening that are like embodied listening. What it does is it's like the important information comes to the surface easily. More easily, that signal to noise ratio gets better. But you have to experiment with that. You can't ever trust that. That's just like a thing that you do enough. And then you're like, oh, wow, shit, that works. It's it can be that easy. Yes, it's that easy. Yeah. Yeah. So given

that so much of what we've talked about with listening is about filtering. We're like talking about like what is being filtered, what's not being filtered. And it might be in relation to a person. How does that work with your reality? What how does listening, the quality of listening affect your reality? Filter your reality tremendously. It's like, it's an interesting thing because I see so many people worried about what they're going to say, what they're going to do, how they're going to do it,

who's going to see it? How do people think about them? Blah blah blah blah blah. And it's all about like their capacity to penetrate somebody else. Like influence and affect other people. And what's fascinating to me is that my experience is listening is one of the deepest ways of affecting your reality, how the caliber, the quality of your listening. It affects what people are going to

say to you. It affects the information that you're going to gather. But if let's say you're doing business and your quality of listening is going to affect how good your product is, it's going to affect how happy your customers are. It's going to affect how how much your employees are happy, how much they feel heard. Like it has a tremendous effect on your reality. And that's just the external internally when you're listening and you're listening in that attuned way. This is

externally as well. But internally when you're listening in that attuned way, like we evolve quicker. Like it's like there's just something that happens where it's like the things that need to come to the surface, come to the surface. Like there's a respect, there's an attunement. Just like if your child is deeply attuned to as a kid, they just develop holistically quicker, better. And so it's the same with ourselves. It's like in a weird way, you can say

meditation is a listening of oneself. And obviously a lot of people do it in a way to manage themselves, which isn't a listening. But at some point in your meditation, you come across the idea that it's like, oh, it's non-management. It's all just listening and you'll just notice the development happen. So it influences not just what comes to you in the world, the quality of people, the kinds of information, the way people interact with you. Like if you think in your life,

who is the people in my life who listen the best? And like here's what you probably don't feel like, what an asshole. You're like, oh, I love that person. They listen to me well. Like they're a good listener. And so you influence how people show up, who shows up, what information you get, and you unfold quicker, the more that your capacity to listen is, and the people around you

unfold quicker. Yeah. What you just said about how listening really well is also listening to yourself and like meditation essentially forms of it can be listening to yourself really ties together a couple of things we've been talking about here. Because when we've said that you can listen from your whole body, there's also a way that what that is is that you're listening to the way your body's responding to what's being said. And so your body, as you said earlier, you're always listening.

But you know, there's a phenomenon that we've talked about where sometimes somebody will say something completely illogical, but they'll say it with conviction. You see this all over the world right now. They'll say it with conviction and people will believe the content because what they're actually picking up is a conviction. And so it's like there's a way that the body responds to conviction in a

way that might for some people feel like safety might be like, okay, yeah, I can trust this. There's conviction here. And they're not recognizing unless you're listening to your body to the extent where you're like, oh, I noticed that there's something about the way this person speaking that makes me feel safe. And it doesn't seem related to the content. And I can separate that out and be like, maybe, right. Maybe it's not actually the words that I'm hearing that are that I'm responding to right

now. Yeah. So yeah, that's a really interesting point about listening generally like one of the things that's important in our teaching about listening is that you don't put yourself entirely in the other person. If you put yourself entirely in the other person, it's it's not really listening.

Like that's like, you know, like there's almost like a trying to influence trying to make sure that they feel safe trying to make sure that, you know, like they're cared for intended to and which is another form of management, like the deeper forms of listening, you're always have some percentage of your awareness in yourself. Which is an incredibly useful thing. Like you said,

oh, I'm I'm feeling their conviction, not the intelligence of what they're saying. But also, I noticed that people who are who are good at listening to themselves, they're less likely to fall for the con. They're less likely to ignore, you know, the boyfriend who's going to turn abusive. They're less likely to run away from themselves, abandon themselves to make somebody else happy, etc, etc. Like because the information you're getting isn't just from the head. The information

you're getting is how your body's reacting. And and and you get that mirror. Yeah. How how is my heart responding to this? Like someone saying things that sound nice to me or giving me approval. But what why is my gut feeling the way it's feeling right now? Yeah. Exactly. So yeah, listening is always got a there's an aspect of attention in your own body to it. If you're listening in that very

in a deep way, yeah, it's interesting because it's you that's a little bit counterintuitive. Like, oh, if I'm listening to you, I'm fully in you, but it's that's more management and chasing you than it is being right or even the the notion that if I'm listening to you, I'll remember all of the factual things that you said, which you know, like I may be getting more facts. The facts might be more about like, they might be more inclusive of my response to you and how my all the

different intelligences in my system are hearing what you're saying. And so there's there's sometimes a bit of a paradox or kind of something counterintuitive where I might come away from a conversation and especially happens in coaching sessions where the the details just go right in and out, but something much deeper lands and stays. And then is then a part of the relationship, it's become more like both parties can become more aware of whatever that is that doesn't have words.

Yeah. And there can be more connection with less episodic memory and content being remembered. Yeah. And there's something else that happens like you'll know like you know this. So when we're doing like an in-person retreat, we really ask people not to take notes and we try to take any notes and the important notes in advance for them because though they might get it more in their

head, they don't get it in their whole body. And so trying to remember information often makes it that you grow that you get it you understand it intellectually, but you don't understand it in your body. Yeah. Yeah. And that brings me to another another question here is a lot of what we've been talking about with listening is on the receiving side when someone else is speaking. And that might create the idea that you stop listening to speak or ask a question, but as we've been saying,

you're always listening. So how what's your sense of how listening continues while speaking and asking a question? And I asked that from the sensation in my body as the question comes through in that practice. Exactly. I was going to say you it's funny to watch you have a question that you're actually doing. But yeah, great question. I noticed that when I'm listening and talking, when I'm in that deep form of listening, I'm talking the same time, I'm very curious about what the fuck's going to

come out of my mouth. It's like it's like I'm experiencing it for the first time. It's like it's an unfolding that delights me the way like watching grass, you know, with a little bit of wind in it delights me. It's like this, I am listening to the like it feels like a channeling almost. And I'll say to people who are interested in it that it takes a while to get there to like there's a lot of listening that happens typically, at least for me, it was a lot of listening that had to happen

before I could speak from that place. And then then it becomes like second nature because it's so much more enjoyable, so much more pleasant to be listening. Yeah. That way comes back to the filters we were talking about listening in a way that is reducing the filters or using just a

different set of more subtle filters. The same thing when you're listening to yourself for the impulse to speak, there's a very subtle impulse that you can hear that's a very different one from the one that's already thinks it knows what to say or is speaking from identity or personality or pattern or a role. Yeah. The other thing that I'll say is like if you're listening to this, that somebody might be like making this into a rule or morality or something and I would say,

watch out for that. Like listen, like listen, listen, if you listen to your body, if you listen to to awareness, if you listen to listening, notice how it thinks about making a rule or making it a morality or making it something that you have to do. It's, it almost feels like when you have to do it, it's the opposite of doing it. You know, so I just, I just want to put that warning out there for people like somebody's going to listen to say, okay, now once I listen, right, I'll be

blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Like it's much more of a like, what a joy. Yeah. What a joy it is to listen like this. Yeah. Yeah. I'm also curious to talk about listening in business. Yeah. What happens if someone's listening in a board meeting, listening in a sales meeting, listening to a customer? Well, let's talk about what happens if you don't listen. Great. People don't feel heard, people feel pissed off. There's a lot more power struggles. The inefficiency abounds. Everybody's

fighting to be heard or decided they can't be heard. You don't get the best ideas. If you look at say like the Aristotle project that Google did and one of the things they saw was that really functional teams were ones where everybody felt really comfortable speaking. And contrary opinions were comfortable and that there was actually everybody's voice was heard that the relevant voices were heard to the problem. That only happens if people feel

listened to. That doesn't happen any other way. So more functional teams, less likely to get duped in a deal, more likely to get a deal done because for instance, when I noticed that like when we were interviewing CEOs as a venture capitalist, I always knew who would get picked and they were the people who were asking a bunch of questions. So the ones who asked questions and then listened were the ones to get the job. The ones who were answering questions usually were not the ones to get

the job. If you listen to what a venture capitalist wants to hear before you tell them, it's probably better. If you listen to what the customer wants before you pitch them, it's probably better. So listening basically is one of the most profound ways to make your business accelerate quicker. Yeah. Then you're coming up with an idea. I got an idea and I'm going to go present it and see what happens. It's like that's not bad, especially if then you listen and see what happens and change

because you've been listening. But like the iteration, even if you're in a high iteration, listening is half of the iterative process. So listening is just critical and unfortunately, not what a lot of leaders do. Some leaders are great at it. Many of them aren't. When I see leaders who are not just successful but have a certain level of peace in them, they're all really good listeners. They're all really good listeners. They do things like if they're senior,

they're the last person to speak in a meeting. If a decision gets made, the most junior person starts because they know their opinion is going to influence other folks. They're just really good listeners because they know that there's intelligence everywhere. They can learn to mind it if they listen. Now of course, in the context of leadership, I can imagine people having a question of this sounds pretty passive. If you're going to run meetings and everyone gets

to speak and all of the meetings, are you ever going to get anything done? It brings back the question of filtering. There's a way that you might be sitting with somebody and you're like, I'm just going to listen to whatever you have to say for the next hour. I don't need to change or filter that. I'm just here with you. Then there's times where we've got one hour to decide the

direction for the business with a bunch of stakeholders with disagreements. How does listening come in that way in, say, leadership or sometimes in coaching sessions where there's times where we'll cut people off in the mid-sentence because we're really listening on a different level and have another question that just comes through. How does that interplay at work with listening from what might be perceived as a passive listening place to listening in such a way that's deeply

engaging and filtering in real time with a group, for example? Yeah. I thought about we just did a retrospective of the decision course and you were there, obviously. We all had very different ideas of what needed to change in that course. I think in most companies, it would have been ended in disagreement and some sort of power struggle and blah, blah, blah, blah. We all came in with very different opinions. Everybody spoke their opinion. Everybody said what was important to

them. We all walked away going, oh, that felt great. We know what to do and we all felt good about what was going to happen next. You might not have seen, it might not have seemed like anybody was listening, but everybody can deeply considered what was being said, saw the truth in it and whatever was being said. That's what allowed that movement to happen. I could say to somebody, whoa, you just came down so hard on that. It might stop people from presenting other information. Oh, yeah,

yeah. That's not what I meant. It was that kind of thing was happening all over the call. What did you mean there? How did that? How did that? Oh, yeah. I see how that connected my thought over here and that's what was happening and that comes from the listening. The listening, like you said, and I said, listening is always happening whether you're talking or not, whether

you're taking action or not. It's not a time when you stop listening. The question is, are you in that state of like a whole body present listening for lack of better words or while you're talking while you're doing? Yeah. And I noticed there was a structure to the meeting that made it feel like I could just listen to like to where whatever point we were in the meeting,

there were certain things that were being discussed in a certain format. And so that there's a way that having structure in a conversation or a coaching session or in a meeting can create more spaciousness for listening in certain ways. And also sometimes it's best just to have no structure. And like if your kids having a tantrum, you're not like, okay, now we're going to do this phase of the tantrum and then we're going to do the solutions phase. I don't know, maybe you do.

But how do you see that structure playing into listening? Yeah, we just did a brainstorming session. And that was kind of like a group listening. So we were doing, we're starting the YouTube channel and we were thinking about like how to do teaching videos and Mark and Kat came over to the house and we had all bunch of shit to do. And we just kind of sat around and had breakfast and wandered and talked and exchanged ideas. And we're like, little anxiety of like, oh, are we going to get

anything done? And all of a sudden pop the things showed up and we're like, oh, there it is. And we had like the most fun day of, and I believe that the, I just saw some of the first products of that, like of that brainstorming session. And I'm like, wow, this is so much better than what we were doing before. And, and that came from like a listening of no action isn't right right now, even though we have a time crunch. What is it that we're, and we were all kind of listening together

for that, for that creative thing. And so when you see these big companies lose their creativity, we're not creating new shit anymore. We're just refining stuff. It's because there isn't that spaciousness to actually, like listen for it, wait for it to come and then follow it. Yeah. It feels like a channeling. Yeah. Yeah. Once, once there's an identity, like once the company or the team has an identity, this is what we are. This is who we are. This is how we do it.

There's ways that that can provide a lot of structure and direction. And there's also ways that that can add a whole new layer of filters. Yes. To the listening. Exactly. Yeah. Yeah. And some cultures are great in a company like you have, you want to stay on brand and you want to make sure that like you're serving your clients and those kind of things and those filters are great. And there's just like a waiting for it instead of forcing it instead of a management. There's just a,

I know it's going to come. I'm going to trust just like you would talking from a place of listening. Yeah. Yeah. So no, I want to flip the surround a little bit. People may be listening to this. They're like, Oh, yeah, listening's great. I love it when people listen to me. How do I get everybody in my life to listen better? You don't stop it. Stop it. Stop it. Stop it. Stop it. Stop it. If you really want everybody in your life to start listening to you better,

start listening better. That's like the best possible way to do it. And um, concerning yourself with the way I'd say it this way is if you concern yourself with how people are listening to you, then you are not listening to yourself and you're not listening to them. And it's not within your control. And the more you do it, the more you try to get someone to listen to you, the less, the more controlled they feel and the less likely they are to listen to you.

So if you, if you really want people to listen to you, then I would say listen, just become a great listener. And then a, it doesn't matter if they listen to you and be they're more likely to listen to you. Because what we really want is to listen to ourselves. If we're listening to ourselves, what other people do doesn't matter so much. Yeah. We will be able to trust that we navigate that world. However, it's best for us. Exactly. Exactly. Awesome. Yeah. Wow. What a fun conversation.

Thank you, Brett. I enjoyed it. I had a extra spacious quality to it. It did. Yeah. I think we were both listening deeply as we were having the conversation. That was fun. Yeah. That's cool. Thank you, Joe. Thank you, everybody, for listening. Yeah. Thank you. Thank you. Okay. Thanks for listening to the art of accomplishment. If you enjoyed what you heard today, please subscribe and rate us in your podcast app. We'd love your feedback. So feel free to

send us questions or comments. You can reach out to us, join our newsletter or check out our courses at artofaccomplishment.com.

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