Active listening means giving someone your full attention, letting them finish, and reflecting back what you heard before you respond. Put the phone down, stop rehearsing your reply, and check that you understood. It's simple, rare, and powerful.
What it looks like
- Be present — phone away, eyes up, actually facing them.
- Let them finish — don't jump in to fix or one-up.
- Reflect it back — “So it sounds like you're frustrated because…”
- Ask, don't assume — “What did you mean by that?” beats guessing.
The one habit that changes everything
Before you answer, summarize what the other person said in your own words. If you can do that and they say “exactly,” you were really listening. If you can't, you weren't — and now you get a second chance to hear them.
People rarely need you to fix it. Usually they just need to feel heard. “That sounds really hard” does more than any advice you were about to give.
Common questions
What if I get distracted?
Catch yourself, and gently come back: “Sorry, say that last part again — I want to get it right.” That's respectful, not embarrassing.
Isn't giving advice helpful?
Sometimes — but ask first: “Do you want help thinking it through, or do you just need to vent?” Then honor the answer.