Filed in Mindfulness

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I'm Kathleen Huebner, a transformation mindset and wellness coach here to guide you on a journey of self-discovery and empowerment.
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Think about the last time you were in a conversation and suddenly realized you had no idea what the other person just said.
Not because you weren’t paying attention, but because you were so busy composing your response in your head that you missed the whole thing.
The truth is, we all think we’re listening when a lot of the time, we’re just waiting to talk.
I know this because I’ve caught myself doing it. Mid-conversation, I’ve had the strange experience of stepping outside myself and realizing I never actually received what the other person said. I was just holding onto my thoughts, waiting for my turn.
Once you notice that about yourself, you can’t un-see it.
Most people assume listening means being quiet while someone else talks. You can be completely silent and still not be listening. Your body can be there, but your mind is somewhere else.
Active listening is being fully present with the person in front of you. It’s receiving not just their words but the feeling behind them.
The most important distinction: listening to respond vs. listening to understand.
When we listen to respond, we catch fragments, fill gaps with assumptions, and start forming our answer before the other person finishes. When we listen to understand, we stay curious and let what they’re saying actually land.
Active listening and empathy are the same thing. You can’t truly have one without the other. And when you’re aligned from the inside out with a calm nervous system and not running on stress, active listening comes naturally. You’re not caught up in your own noise, so you have space for someone else.
I while back, I was working with a client who was going through a heavy divorce. What made it most painful wasn’t just the divorce, it was that she felt completely unseen throughout the whole process. People around her kept telling her what to do rather than listening to how she felt.
When she finally had a space where her thoughts were respected, she told me she felt so much lighter. Like something she’d been carrying in her chest for months had finally been allowed to leave.
That’s what active listening does. When something hard happens, we carry it with us until we can release it. Being truly heard is one of the most powerful ways to let it go.
I’ve seen this consistently in group coaching sessions. When people feel genuinely listened to rather than advised at, something visibly shifts. They exhale, soften, and I can literally see them come back to themselves.
Journaling works the same way. As you get it out of your head and onto the page it creates the same release. Because both are giving the weight somewhere to go.
When people feel safe enough to be heard, trust deepens and bonds get closer. There is nothing more valuable in a relationship than that.
Listening to respond instead of understand. Nobody is at fault, it’s human nature. We hold onto our thought so we don’t lose it, and in doing so we miss what’s actually being said. My reframe is this: if I lose the thought, I lose the thought. The conversation matters more than the point I was about to make.
Stress, distraction, and emotional charge. All three prevent you from staying focused and present. When you’re emotionally activated, you cannot receive someone else fully. If you’re under that kind of pressure, the most generous thing you can do is be honest — tell them you don’t have the capacity right now, step away, bring your nervous system down, and come back when you can truly be there. Someone would always rather have you fully present later than half-present now.
Ego and the need to be right. The ego always wants to be heard and always wants to win. When it takes over, it blocks real listening entirely. Sometimes without us realizing it. This shows up strongly in conversations about strongly held beliefs. If someone isn’t willing to hear another perspective, there isn’t really a conversation happening, it’s just two people waiting for their turn to be right. It’s worth asking yourself honestly: are you ever that person?
Knowing your limits as a listener. The hardest conversations for me are highly technical or detailed ones — my brain shuts down and I stop retaining anything. What works for me is doing it, not just hearing it explained. Knowing that about myself has been important. Instead of nodding along while retaining nothing, I ask: “Can we walk through this together so I can try it?” Know yourself as a listener. There’s no shame in asking for what actually works for you.
Before a conversation with someone whose energy tends to be heavy, simply zip up an imaginary hoodie. Let everything they say that isn’t positive stick to the hoodie instead of to you. When you walk away, unzip it and let it fall to the ground. It lets you stay fully present without absorbing what isn’t yours to carry.
Before jumping in with advice, ask: “How can I help you? What do you need from me right now?”
Some people want advice. Some just want to be heard. And some need to say it out loud to process it. The only way to know is to ask and then actually listen to the answer. I love how the Polka Dot Powerhouse women’s group does this — every coffee connect ends with “How can I help you move forward?” Simple, but it changes everything.
Active listening shows up in your whole body. Arms and legs uncrossed signals openness. Leaning in slightly shows you’re engaged. Steady eye contact says I’m here with you. And phone completely away — not face down, not on the table. Away. Even a quick glance signals that you have somewhere else to be.
When you ask a question specifically about what someone just said, they know you were listening. If they go quiet after sharing something, they’re usually waiting for a response, and a thoughtful question is often more meaningful than advice. If they pause and keep talking, stay quiet. Even if they repeat themselves, they may still be processing.
Silence in active listening is not awkward, it’s respectful. It shows you’re taking in what was said before responding, not just holding your answer the whole time they were talking.
This is one of the most important distinctions I’ve learned — the hard way.
Talking at someone means telling them how it is. No room for dialogue, no space for their perspective. Talking to someone means a real conversation with mutual respect on both sides.
The difference is respect. And boundaries.
I no longer allow people to talk at me. If someone wants a real conversation, I’m in. If they’re going to talk at me — I’m not. You don’t have to accept that either.
Disagreements are where active listening matters most and where it’s hardest.
I don’t like confrontation. My instinct is not to become defensive or fuel the fire. But that doesn’t mean I absorb whatever is thrown at me either. If a conversation can be constructive, I’ll stay in it. If it can’t, I close it down. Respectfully but clearly:
“You’ve been heard. I’m not going to discuss this further right now.”
Sometimes that’s the most loving thing you can do for both of you. People sometimes just need time to cool down before a real conversation is possible — and giving them that space is itself an act of listening.
Active listening is rare not because people don’t value it — most do — but because responding is our default and overriding it takes consistent practice.
It also requires unlearning the belief that your job as a listener is to fix what the other person is talking about. It isn’t. Sometimes they just want to be heard. The sooner we stop rushing to fix, the sooner we create space for someone to release what they’re carrying.
My one piece of advice for becoming a better active listener starting today:
Take a deep breath. Actively engage in listening rather than thinking about your response. Practice it in every conversation — not perfectly, but consistently. Don’t be hard on yourself. It’s human nature. But every conversation is a chance to try again!
You can be the person who makes someone feel truly heard, starting with your very next conversation.
It doesn’t require perfection. It requires presence.
Put the phone down. Make eye contact. Ask how you can help. And if you lose the thought you were holding onto, let it go.
The person in front of you matters more. 🦋
Who in your life could use the gift of being truly listened to this week?
📖 Whispers Within Us is a book about learning to listen to the signs around you, to your inner guidance, and to the quiet whispers that have been speaking all along. Grab your copy at the link below.
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Love, Light, and Gratitude 🩵
— Kathleen
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I'm Kathleen Walton, a transformation mindset and wellness coach here to guide you on a journey of self-discovery and empowerment.
Welcome to the Blog
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My brand and website were lovingly crafted by Aubre at Artisan Kind in her 100% solar-powered design studio
Brand Photography by Christy Janeczko Photography
©2023 Whispers Within Us
My brand and website were lovingly crafted by Aubre at Artisan Kind in her 100% solar-powered design studio
brand photography by christy janeczko photography | ©2023 WHISPERS WITHIN US
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