100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

Jane Stephens: people are so engaged with smartphones they’re not listening

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

Traffic lights on way for busy intersection ‘black spot’

A key intersection on the southern Sunshine Coast is set for a major upgrade, but a local councillor says it could funnel more traffic More

College set to expand with new campus

A senior secondary school that supports disengaged and at-risk young people is planning to expand its footprint on the Sunshine Coast with a new More

‘Flavour of the month’: couple redefines Coast patisserie scene

A young couple have put freshly baked pastries on the map, opening a new patisserie complete with “not-to-miss” flavours of the month. Lachlan and Cheyenne Peterson More

Petition lodged against backpackers as public notification underway

Public consultation has commenced for proposed backpacker accommodation that has already raised concerns with a local council and ignited an online petition against the More

Rescue crew marks busy year as new base nears completion

More than 600 people were airlifted by the Sunshine Coast-based LifeFlight crew during the past 12 months, as the organisation prepares to open a More

Sami Muirhead: the high price of petrol

The police called me this week and it was not a pleasant phone conversation. They told me I had not paid for my petrol and More

“Hello!” I said breezily.

“Good, thanks!” the woman on my bus replied, her eyes momentarily flicking up from her phone.

That was the moment I realised that listening in everyday situations, where the stakes are not high but the connection is a civil nicety, is dead.

We are poorer for it.

Much has been made about people not talking to each other, but instead being glued to their phones.

This is achingly true, but the problem goes deeper: when a person does actually speak, the ability to respond appropriately seems to have been lost.

Has listening and engaging become some mysterious lost art?

A woman at a presentation I recently gave in Caloundra shared an experience she had during the worst week of her life: when her husband was dying.

At her local shop, a checkout operator asked, “How’s your day going?”, as they are trained to do.

On the Monday, she responded with: “My husband is dying, so not so good.”

On Wednesday, the query was: “So, how’s your day?”.

Her answer was: “My husband died this morning.”

On Friday, she was asked: “So what are your plans for the day?”

Her answer? “I have an appointment with the funeral director to organise my husband’s funeral.”

People are glued to their phones. Picture: Shutterstock.

Questions are asked with no interest in the answer.

Sometimes an answer doesn’t even register.

Most often, the inquisitor has no idea what to do if your answer is real and raw.

I was recently walking on the beach with a friend I do not see often, and she wanted a photo of us together.

I asked a young woman nearby, who was standing with her friends, if she would mind taking a photo.

“Sure!” she responded, happily.

Then she handed me her phone and assembled her friends and posed for a group shot.

Gobsmacking!

I have another friend who demonstrated what I think is the right recipe to improve our collective difficulty.

When I started telling him a story, he stopped me.

“Can you please just wait one moment?” he asked me.

“I want to give you my full attention but I just need to finish responding to this text.”

In work or life, when we ask a question, let’s resolve to listen to the answer.

And for kindness and civility’s sake, let’s be deliberate about it.

Dr Jane Stephens is a UniSC journalism lecturer, media commentator and writer. The opinions expressed are those of the author. These are not the views of Sunshine Coast News’ publishers.

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Go back
Go back Btn
Return Home
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share