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  1. strikemag.org

    Radical Listening is not a sacrifice you make. Radical Listening is as much an act of self-love as it is an act of expressing love for others. If listening is hurting you, stop. If listening to a particular person, to a particular story, in a particular moment, hurts you, stop. Take a step back.
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  3. marlenechism.com

    Radical listening requires discipline and courage, but it is the best defense against being distracted or blindsided. Leaders who listen control the conversation and shape the culture. Bottom Line: Radical listening improves executive performance. For a copy of Marlene's complete Manifesto, click here!
  4. ayeletbaron.com

    Oct 4, 2023From there, radical listening spurs conversations that help us build a future filled with communities where voices are shared, heard, honored, and valued. From a young age, we're taught to listen to authorities—parents, teachers, religious figures. This setup makes us forget to listen, and trust, the most important voice: our own.
  5. bettercities.org.au

    Sep 5, 2024It was an exercise in what we're calling "radical listening." Of course, the idea of active listening is familiar enough in personal relationships. But in our civic lives, frayed as they are by grubby politics, sound-byte news cycles and the sheer nastiness of social media, we have all but lost the great art of civilised dissent.
  6. advice.theshineapp.com

    Listening is a radical act and a simple way we can start to break down systemic barriers around us. Radically listening takes what you know about listening and goes one step further. It means dismantling the filters you typically have on when you listen to someone—from questioning to judging—and it means offering a space to let someone ...
  7. magazine.washington.edu

    Radical listening doesn't mean inaction, however. "As a listener, after you have heard someone iterate moments of inequality, you actually need to do something," Joseph says. "But that action has to always be in concert with the speaker's desires." But the first step is to "pause that judgment to just listen and hear for a moment ...
  8. Nov 25, 2019"Radical listening" is a term used for a disciplined practice focused intently on the person talking while removing our personal biases and filters. This discipline allows you to honor others ...
  9. betterway.network

    Karin Woodley writes about how to use radical listening to create organisations 'without walls' in a blog drawn from her opening remarks at our May roundtable on that theme. 'Radical listening is a process that enables us to disrupt stereotypes, tackle social injustices and transfer control of our
  10. pinterest.com

    Anna Kövecses is a Hungarian born artist living between a small seaside village in Cyprus and a woodside cabin by Lake Balaton, in Hungary. She creates sweet, child-like digital collages using bold, minimalist shapes in a trademark palette.
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