
I grew up in “tornado alley,”
that stretch of geography up the midsection of Oklahoma and
Texas that’s a breeding ground for killer storms.
The spring I turned 12 we had 63 consecutive
days of tornado warnings. That’s when a tornado is actually
sighted on the ground. In those days, the TV weatherman was
pretty good at reporting the weather that had already happened,
but his predictions of weather-to-come were spotty at best.
Today’s meteorologists are not only
better trained, but they also have life-saving technology called
Doppler radar. This marvelous tool enables them to track the
earliest warning signs of a brewing storm, then predict with
pinpoint accuracy when and where the storm will strike.
You can do much the same with the storms
of everyday relationships.
Good relationships are built on things like
trust, caring, and follow-through. And the glue that holds it
all together is dialogue. Real dialogue occurs when people feel
safe in expressing their views without fear of being judged
or ridiculed. Two competing monologues do not make for good
dialogue.
So what does that have to do with tornadoes
and Doppler radar?
Human Storms
Storms are the enemy of dialogue. Not the
wind and rain variety. I’m talking about storms that are
spawned by our own behaviors.
There are a number of common behaviors
that get in the way of dialogue. These dialogue-snuffing behaviors
fall under the headings of violence and silence.
Conversational violence is not necessarily
mean-spirited, ill-intended or even loud. For instance, I recently
overhead someone in a meeting say “As any smart manager
knows, this is the best option. What do you think, Bob?”
The unspoken implication was that if Bob disagrees he must not
be “a smart manager.”
Other forms of conversational violence include
using absolute language (words like “every” and
“always”) or monopolizing the air time. On the surface,
these practices may seem a bit annoying though relatively benign.
But they still do violence to the dialogue by tending to shut
people down or discourage them from open participation.
One form of conversational silence
is “masking,” which consists of understating or
only selectively revealing our true opinions. Another form of
conversational silence is “avoiding” or staying
completely away from sensitive subjects.
In a previous column I told of a large organization
where only six people received a “Needs Improvement”
rating on their performance appraisals. The CEO said his people
were pretty good at most everything except holding each other
accountable. The problem was sugarcoating. Rather than talking
openly about performance issues that begged for honest discussion,
people danced around the subject for fear of jeopardizing friendships.
An interesting thing about conversational
silence is that you can talk all day long with someone and still
be in silence. In this context, silence doesn’t mean you’re
not talking. It means you’re not talking about what needs
to be talked about.
Deadly Silence
Silence can be very expensive, or even deadly.
In one widely reported case, a woman checked
into a hospital for a routine tonsillectomy but had half of
her foot amputated. No fewer than seven hospital employees had
sensed that something was amiss — for example, the person
assembling the surgical instruments knew that an electric saw
was not used to remove tonsils — but none of them spoke
up to question the doctors giving the orders.
During a planned outage at a nuclear power
plant I visited, crews worked two complete shifts before someone
on the third shift challenged the supervisor and pointed out
that work on a particular project wasn’t scheduled until
the following year. Oops. The error cost the company more than
$2 million in lost revenue and outage expenses. Why did it happen?
Workers on the first two shifts reported to supervisors who
didn’t welcome feedback. In other words, the workers simply
didn’t feel safe in speaking up.
And at NASA they have what has been dubbed
the “culture of silence” in which some NASA employees
felt intimidated to the point of shutting down their repeated
warnings of impending danger. This was famously apparent in
the case of the Columbia space shuttle disaster.
Two competing monologues do not constitute
dialogue. Genuine dialogue occurs when people are comfortable
in putting their honest opinions and feelings on the table,
when they aren’t worried about being judged or ridiculed.
In other words, dialogue flourishes only in a “safe”
environment.
Safety in Conversation
There are a number of skills that
help us establish and maintain safety in a conversation. One
excellent safety tool is both an attitude and a behavior. It’s
something called patience.
I received some excellent coaching
in patience nearly forty years ago. I was a young investigative
reporter at The Dallas Times Herald. My editor was
another young journalist named Jim Lehrer. Yes, it was the same
Jim Lehrer you now know on PBS.
One day in the newsroom Jim walked over
to my desk and said “Tell me about your interviews.”
“Well, I do a lot of them,”
I said. “What exactly do you want to know?”
Jim asked me to walk him through my interview
process. Good interviewing skills are important for any reporter.
And they’re especially important for an “investigative”
reporter because, for many of the people you interview, talking
to a reporter is about as appealing as sliding down a giant
razor blade into a vat of alcohol.
I explained to Jim that after doing preliminary
research on a story assignment I would assemble a list of possible
sources to interview, compile an inventory of questions, then
set out to do the interviews.
“Okay,” Jim said. “But
tell me what happens during the actual interview.”
I thought all of this should be self-evident
to my editor, but I played along.
“Well, it’s fairly simple, Jim.
I ask a question. The source gives me an answer. Then I ask
another question.”
At that point, Jim gave me the “time
out” sign. “Consider this approach,” he said.
“Ask a question. Then listen to the answer. Then silently
count to five.”
“What?” I said. “Do you
mean literally count to five? That’s going to seem like
an eternity.”
“Exactly,” Jim said. “It
seems like an eternity because many people are uncomfortable
with a lull in a conversation, even in a conversation they might
prefer not to be having. So their tendency is to fill a void
of silence with noise. They will often either elaborate on their
initial response to your question, or they will respond in a
different direction that’s even more revealing than the
first.”
Jim challenged me to develop my patience
with this pause-to-listen approach.
Count to Five
That same day I set out on a series of interviews
for an investigative series I was doing. The people on my interview
schedule were sure to be “reluctant conversationalists.”
I tried Jim’s “count to five” idea. And you
know what? I was never able to count past “three”
because the people immediately jumped in with another thought,
an even better quote, or an even more revealing insight.
Genuine listening — with the intent
to understand rather than with the intent to judge or to prepare
your rebuttal — is one of the best ways to create and
maintain safety in a conversation.
Another good safety tool is to welcome disagreement.
That’s right, welcome disagreement.
Many people are conditioned to avoid disagreement,
even to the point of evading some subjects altogether. Doing
so forfeits wonderful opportunities to learn.
I have a friend — exceptionally capable
and productive in every way — who frequently starts a
conversation by saying “Make me smart on something.”
He’ll ask what I’ve recently read that I found interesting
or helpful. He’ll ask my view of current issues in the
news, or my opinion on a hot social topic. If I express a view
that’s different from his he’ll say something like,
“Oh, that’s great, you see it differently. Tell
me more about your thinking.” He’s not only not
threatened by disagreement, he recognizes disagreement as a
great fulcrum to learning.
One of the great joys of being a human being
is the opportunity to interact with and learn from others. That
opportunity is enhanced when we behave in ways that make it
safe for people to express their true opinions and honest feelings.
Silence is not always golden.