
Somewhere along the way, we stopped listening to each other.
Not literally, people still talk, still nod, still wait their turn. But actual listening? The kind where you’re fully present, open, genuinely curious about another person’s experience? That’s become rare. And after years of hosting conversations for a living, I started to see it everywhere.
The Pattern I Couldn’t Stop Noticing
Through hundreds of podcast interviews, through conversations with women in my community, through conversations with friends, I kept running into the same thing. So many people think they’re good listeners. They’re not.
You can almost see it happening in real time. Someone’s talking, and you can see the wheels turning behind their eyes, not because they’re absorbing what’s being said, but because they’re already formulating their response. They’re waiting for their turn, not listening for understanding.
People get so caught up in being right, in believing their opinion is the only one that matters, that they end up forcing their perspective onto others instead of actually hearing them. And here’s the thing, real listening requires patience. It requires putting down the need to respond, to fix, to win, and just being present with what someone else is saying.
What Changed When I Actually Listened
Here’s what I started noticing instead, in the conversations where I actually managed to do this right: I’d walk away with a completely different perspective. Something I’d never even considered before landing in that conversation.
And that’s the part most people miss. This was never about having your mind changed. It’s about being open enough to hear someone else’s thoughts, fully, without an agenda, without needing to redirect it back to your own experience or your own opinion.
That distinction matters. H.E.A.R. isn’t about conceding or agreeing. It’s about creating the kind of space where someone else’s truth gets to exist fully, even if yours doesn’t change one bit.
Why I Built This Into a Framework
I realized I needed to create something that actually teaches people how to do this, how to properly engage in conversation, how to truly listen to the people we’re talking to, whether that’s a podcast guest, a client, a partner, a friend, or a stranger.
That’s how the H.E.A.R. Method was born:
H — Hold Space
E — Empathize Without Ego
A — Ask Questions, Be Curious
R — Respond With Presence
Four pillars. One goal: more honest, open dialogue between people who actually hear each other, not just wait for their turn to talk.
What’s Coming
Over the next few weeks I’m breaking down each pillar of the H.E.A.R. Method, what it actually means, what it looks like in practice, and where most of us (myself included) get it wrong.
Starting with Hold Space, which drops Friday.
If you’ve ever walked away from a conversation feeling unheard, or caught yourself doing the thing where you’re already planning your response before the other person finishes talking, this series is for you.
Let’s actually start listening to each other again.
April Tribe Giauque
Empowerography
We bring powerful women to an empowered stage who will change you with their stories of courage, transformation and real life inspiration.
Empowerography is a podcast whose purpose is to Empower. Elevate and Educate. Amplifying the voices of Women.
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