Thanksgiving is a Day to Learn How to Listen

Thanksgiving, a Day to Listen

“To listen is very hard, because it asks of us so much interior stability that we no longer need to prove ourselves by speeches, arguments, statements, or declarations. True listeners no longer have an inner need to make their presence known. They are free to receive, to welcome, to accept. Listening is a form of spiritual hospitality by which you invite strangers to become friends, to get to know their inner selves more fully, and even to dare to be silent with you.” —Henri Nouwen in Bread for the Journey (HarperSanFrancisco, 1997).

Crystal Bridges

Crystal Bridges

As we gather today with a smaller number of family members than usual, this is the perfect time to sit back and listen. Having smaller groups to listen to will make this easier. Listening is at the heart of being a spiritual friend. Thanksgiving is a day to pay a closer attention to the person or persons we have the privilege to celebrate the day with. If you are alone, call someone and listen.

Nouwen reminds us that listening does not mean waiting for our turn to talk. Instead, it is letting someone else know you are offering the gift of your energy and time to be present and attentive.

Some think it may be easier for introverts, but in reality, introverts may still be processing what they want to say in their minds while others are talking, and therefore they are only pseudo-listening. Extroverts may have difficulty responding directly to what they are hearing, for they better process what they hear on the outside.

The answer is practice, engaged repetition. This is an art form that must be practiced consciously every day until it becomes as unconscious as brushing our teeth. Thanksgiving is a good day to start.

We have grown up in a multitasking world where we learn to do many things simultaneously: eating while we work or watching television, working on several projects, seeking to solve multiple problems at a time, looking at emails, texting, or searching on our phones while we are sitting down to meet with others. While someone is talking to us, we may be thinking of how we are going to solve another problem as soon as we move on to the next person or meeting.

Living in the present and active listening are becoming lost arts. We must practice them intentionally. My experience is that making eye contact helps keep us focused on the person or people to whom we are listening. This enables us actively to “look for” the Christ visibly and invisibly within others—who can truly be revealed only as we also begin to see the Christ within ourselves.

The art of listening is a gift to ourselves and all we know and meet. St. Benedict calls it “listening with the ear of our heart.”

My prayer for this Thanksgiving is that each of us can begin to “listen with the ear of our heart.

Joanna. joannaseibert.com

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