Saturday, March 29, 2014

Communication through others ears...

I was nervous about who was going to evaluate me on my communication skills.  I know how I sound in my head, and how things occasionally come out sounded ridiculous, but I was more concerned about how I came across to those around me.  I chose to have a friend of mine and my mother do the evaluations.  Now I was not concerned about what my friend would say, because we have a very open relationship of no judging, just honesty.  So I thought with her, that our outcomes would be very similar.  With my mother, that was a different story.  I think every mother daughter relationship have their periods where one feels more superior than the other.  I did not know because of so much emotion being assigned to our conversations if she would be able to hear me for me, or because I was her daughter.

Surprisingly all of our evaluations were within points of each other!! I found this surprising and relieving! I know what I try to strive for with my conversations, but was not always sure that they came off that way.  Apparently I am not doing that bad of a job at this whole communication thing. :)

From reading through the evaluation categories I learned that I do need to modify my communication and listening tactics a little bit.  I tend to be slightly naïve when people tell me things, and unfortunately I have been that way my whole life.  I take many things at face value, but I am learning at how to analyze the information that I receive, and then how to respond to it.  That is the other issue I have.  Sure I might ramble off a handful of suggestive ways that someone could correct or fix their problems, even though they never asked for that.  This is a family trait as well, so I have some major reconnection to fix there!  I find it helpful talking to people through text message, because it allows me more time to analyze the conversation and to determine if they wanted advice, or they just wanted someone to listen.  My friends are very good at letting me know when I have it wrong because they will question my silence or delayed responses with 'What do you think" or "Has that ever happened to you?"

I really like the relationships that I have created over the years, and I am proud to say that I am communicating on a very honest level with my friends and family.  I appreciate that they are aware of those things within me, and that they use them to their strength as well. 





Saturday, March 22, 2014

Communication with Others


I do not find myself communicating differently with people from different cultures.  I find that when I am at work, as a professional I speak to everyone the same way.  I speak with the same professional demeanor, my language stays consistent.  I do tend to speak differently around friends and family.  I have friends that have different language levels and I do adjust myself accordingly.  With having friends of the family that are teachers as well, it is hard to use slang or abbreviated talk because they will critique your words and communication skills. 
I speak differently at sporting events than I do at the theater as well.  There are different atmospheres that allow different communication skills in order to blend into the culture surrounding you. 
Having a good understanding of the people that you are communicating with allows you to have better relationships with these people.  Always having an open form of communication with the families that you work with can open the lines of communication.
Keeping in constant contact with your families builds a great foundation so that when there is anything that ever comes up that you might need to talk with them about, you already have a strong relationship.  This helps the lines of communication stay open.  One of the hardest parts of communication is being honest with others, but it also a benefit.  When you can have honest communication with others it takes the guess work out of it.  You never go into a situation and are left wondering if they are holding something back.
It is definitely not easy, but it is worth it.

Saturday, March 15, 2014

It's all about the body language.

The show that I chose to watch was Rake.  In the beginning it showed what looked to be recaps from previous episodes.  The scene starts off with a man having what I am assuming is his girlfriend pull out one of his teeth.  He seems to be convincing her to do it, and she does.  Maybe he does not have insurance and has a bad tooth, who knows?! It is possible that he cannot afford insurance, because he got a ride with a neighbor to go to a funeral.  The main character seemed to be upset at the funeral, but it does not seem like he truly knows the person.  In one second there seems to be a heated argument between the main character and someone else at the funeral, and the next second they are hugging and talking together. 
In the next scene the main character goes to a bar to meet up with an acquaintance, but he leads him to the back of his bar and beats him up.  The main character gives nonverbal cues at what looks like to have the man punch him in the face.  His acquaintance does so, and the main character ends up pulling out his tooth!
As it turns out the main character is a lawyer, which would explain why everyone he comes into contact with either seems angry, upset or hurt.  There seem to be a lot of heated arguments with other characters.  I do not know if this is typical for this show, or if it is because it is not the first episode either. 
I thought that this assignment was going to be easy, and it was just the opposite.  I found it hard to stay interested in a show I have never heard about, and never watched before, on mute! 
Turns out he couldn't afford a dentist, and is having money issues.  At the funeral he was listening to a football game that he had made a bet on.  Inside the church at the funeral, he dropped his phone and the football game started echoing through the church.  The man that he started talking to at the funeral was a friend of his that he was trying to get to open up about his fathers death.  He was encouraging him to express his true feelings towards his father now that he has passed. 
The man that he went and saw at the bar was his bookie.  He made a bet on the football game he was listening to at the funeral, and now he is in a huge debt.  So his bookie had to beat him up to demonstrate the seriousness the situation, and to let him know when he needed to pay his debt.
What type of show did I get myself involved in?!?!  Turns out the lawyer has more people upset at him because he is defending a cannibal.  Many of the characters do not understand why he is defending a cannibal, but it turns out that it is not against the law to be one. 
There are a lot of things that I did not pick up with just the nonverbal communication side of it. 
I do think that my assumptions would have been different if it had been a show that I was more familiar with, and knew from the beginning, instead of jumping into a show on their 4th episode.  Trying to understand the characters at this point while the show was on mute was hard and challenging.  It is definitely beneficial to be able to listen!!

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Communication


The person that I think about is one of my professors from back in California.  The things that I feel that made her an effective communicator is that from the very beginning of her class she made herself available to her students. She always welcomed in her students ideas and concepts of things that had been learned from our own journeys.  It was through our personal experiences that she wanted to get to know her students better.  Often times she would take some of her students out for coffee to get to know us better. 

Having such an open and caring teacher allowed me to respect her and feel confident that no matter what struggle I was going through, that I could ask her a question about it, and that I would not just be cast aside.  At another university that I attended, I did not have one teacher that knew my name, I was just a number on a roster.

I would love to model some of my communication behaviors after her.  Having take the simple amount of time to get to know me, and help me through my college career was priceless.  I hope that I am able to transfer that same type of atmosphere with my students and families.  I want to be able to get to know them and for them to be comfortable enough to come to me for whatever they might need.