Relationships thrive on genuine connection—on feeling heard, understood, and supported at a deeper level. Yet all too often, we hold back, afraid of vulnerability, or simply unsure how to open up. This pattern of emotional distance is sometimes called “emotional unavailability.” While it can protect us from hurt, it also holds us back from the warmth and intimacy we crave.
Improve Your Communication Skills: One Essential Step to Success
I want to tell you a story.
In addition to being a college professor, I'm a consultant. The most common kind of training I do, as a consultant, is communication skills training.
I specialize in training health professionals how to talk to patients and families who have been harmed by healthcare.
These are very difficult conversations. We focus a lot on empathic communication skills, which is a topic I've taught a lot about.
I'm going to teach you the single most important step you can take to begin to improve your communication skill.
Nonviolent Communication: How to Transform Your Relationships
Living in 2021 with all of its illness, despair, and violence makes us long for a way of communicating with one another that could produce better outcomes for all of us.
We want a way to communicate that could allow all of us to have our needs be understood and met while meeting other people's needs as well.
I'm going to talk about a technique for communicating called nonviolent communication.
It was developed by an author named Marshall Rosenberg back in the late sixties, early seventies.
It helps us communicate in a way that expresses our feelings, expresses our needs, and respects the needs and feelings of other people.
The Key to Comforting: Name Their Feelings
As the sun sets on another week, I've just finished doing two days of in-person communication skills training.
We were working with 60 doctors, nurses, and other hospital staff to teach them how to talk with patients and families after the patient has been seriously harmed by medical care.
These are extraordinarily difficult conversations, about life or death topics, often with millions of dollars at stake.