The Disappearing Art of Listening

New Delhi [India], February 02: In an age of constant connectivity, silence has become uncomfortable and attention increasingly scarce. Research indicates that the average smartphone user checks their phone more than 80 times a day—a habit closely linked to shrinking attention spans and a steady decline in the quality of face-to-face communication. While technology has multiplied our opportunities to speak, post, and respond, it has quietly eroded one of the most essential human skills: the ability to listen.

Modern conversations are rarely uninterrupted. Notifications buzz mid-sentence, eyes drift to glowing screens, and minds race ahead to formulate replies rather than absorb what is being said. Listening is often reduced to a nod, a quick “hmm,” or a reactive response—signals that suggest presence without engagement. In this distracted environment, being heard does not necessarily mean being understood.

The distinction between hearing and listening is crucial. Hearing is passive; it requires no effort beyond physical reception. Listening, however, demands focus, patience, empathy, and intent. It is an active process—one that involves setting aside assumptions, resisting the urge to interrupt, and allowing silence to do its work. True listening creates space for nuance, emotion, and meaning to emerge.

Yet modern communication systems reward the opposite. Speed, visibility, and opinion are prized over understanding. Social media platforms amplify voices but compress conversations, encouraging instant reactions rather than thoughtful reflection. Silence is often interpreted as disengagement, while loudness and frequency are mistaken for relevance.

As a result, we risk losing more than just attention; we risk losing connection. Listening is the foundation of trust, collaboration, and empathy—whether in personal relationships, professional spaces, or public discourse. Reclaiming this art requires conscious resistance to distraction and a renewed respect for presence.

In a world that constantly urges us to speak, post, and respond, choosing to listen—fully and patiently—may be the most radical act of communication left.

( Soma Bose is a bestselling author & columnist)

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