Communicating

As we all walked down to the pond the other day, Jessica,
who is two years old, chatted with Katie, who is twenty-four and has Down
Syndrome. While each knows in her own mind what she is saying and thinking,
neither of them has the ability to speak clearly. Yet they understood each
other perfectly.
I didn't understand them nearly as well. And I make my
living by communicating. As walked down the lane with them, I watched them
chatting, and wondered what they might be getting right and what we might be
getting wrong.
When we transmit and receive in communication, things can
go wrong for all kinds of reasons:
We send through the wrong wires.
When the teacher's helper asked Kyle, a deaf child in her class, to pick up
his toys, she needed to be reminded to look directly at him so he could read
her intention and read her lips. He was receiving through different wires
than she was sending.
Broken wires or short circuits.
When Dora had a stroke, her language got mixed up. When she spoke a certain
word, it kept coming out as "Skating," even though that's not what she was
talking about. Her frustration was understandable even if her speech was
not.
We send static.
Some people think aloud. They may like the sound of their own voice, but are
not really looking for conversation.
Incompatible software.
George was hurt and furious with the server at the restaurant for not
getting his order right. He has Asperger's so he isn't good at displaying
the non-verbal cues that would help a server read his intentions.
The power is off.
Dad would never talk to me when the hockey game was on unless I stood in
front of the TV.
Different frequencies.
A deer stamped her front hooves at me the other day in the woods. I think
that she was signaling a warning. But I'm not sure if I missed anything else
about that message.
Parts are missing.
Jess is two and not yet developed. Katie's developmental handicap may
prevent her language skills from ever being complete.
With Kate and Jessica, both transmitter and receiver had
their problems, but they got it right anyhow. In their communication, this
is what I saw:
- They approached each other with curiosity. They wondered what the other
was all about. They made no assumptions and met each other brand new.
- Their innate kindness and openness
to the other was the first thing that was communicated.
- They were open to having things go differently, or even wrong. No hard
feelings.
- They adapted as best as they could.
- They gave it up when they needed to move on.
So many things can go wrong when we communicate. But
perhaps it doesn't matter so much what is being said. Perhaps what matters
most in communicating is what Katie and Jess got right. Through all of their
conversation, what was really being communicated was respect for each other.
Stories like these are a regular feature of my free monthly Ezine, Starry Night.
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