Across classrooms, workplaces, and leadership
spaces, speaking is often mistaken for engagement, while listening is quietly
undervalued
“Pay attention.”
“Listen carefully.”
“Don’t get distracted.”
We hear these instructions so often that we stop
truly hearing them.
From childhood onwards, the message is consistent:
listen. At home it is “listen to your parents.” At school it is “listen to your
teacher.” The settings change, but the expectation does not.
Yet a quieter question rarely enters the
conversation: are we actually learning how to listen — or simply being told
that we should?
In structured environments, listening is frequently
mistaken for silence or polite acknowledgement. Increasingly, it has become
performance.
People speak for the sake of speaking, as if every
sentence demands a response, correction, or completion. Others feel compelled
to contribute to everything — even if it means interrupting a thought mid-air
to secure their place in it.
Voices rise over one another — less conversation,
more collision. Ideas overlap. Sentences break mid-air. What emerges is often
incoherent — fragmented, unstructured, rarely absorbed. Everyone speaks — but
very little is understood.
What appears as engagement is often a plausible
performance of participation rather than understanding.
But filling silence is not the same as understanding
what is being said.
Modern life reinforces this pattern. Speed is
rewarded. Silence is uncomfortable. Attention is fragmented across screens,
notifications, and constant interruption. In this environment, listening is the
first casualty. We become efficient responders, but unreliable interpreters of
meaning.
Perhaps it begins earlier than we admit.
In classrooms, listening is often equated with
silence. The “good student” is frequently the one who participates, answers
quickly, and reproduces expected responses. But whether quiet or vocal,
behaviour is mistaken for understanding.
Over time, something shifts. Children are naturally
spontaneous — quick to question, quick to imagine, quick to connect ideas
without fear of being wrong. But when speed of response becomes the measure of
success, listening is reduced to repetition. Curiosity gives way to compliance.
Creativity becomes cautious.
That habit does not remain in school. It follows
directly into adulthood — and into leadership.
Because leadership is not defined by how much one
speaks, but by how deeply one listens.
Real listening is not passive. It is not waiting for
a turn to respond. It is the discipline of absorbing what is said — and what is
not said. It is noticing hesitation, contradiction, emotion, without rushing to
resolve it. It is attention in its most disciplined form.
There is a reason even popular culture returns to
this idea. The song “Listen” from Listen is not about voice — it is
about awareness. About hearing what lies beneath words, not just the words
themselves. A reminder that listening is intentional, not automatic.
As Malcolm Forbes once said, “The art of
conversation lies in listening.”
Perhaps the shift required is simple, but
uncomfortable: from hearing as reaction… to listening as intention.
Because in too many spaces — conversations,
classrooms, and leadership rooms — we are not listening. We are competing.
Words overlap, ideas collide, voices rise, and meaning is lost in noise.
And in the end, leadership is not weakened by lack
of speech.
It is weakened by lack of listening.
The question remains.
Are we actually listening… or just waiting for our
turn to speak?