Communicating Together

Communicating Together

Todays favorite communication is anything but face to face. Most people are using some form of digital technology; texting, social media, selfies, email. Few enjoy the art of writing letters, still a favorite of those from days gone by. Telephone calls are even less often selected in favor of call screening. Leave a voicemail, get one back. Or virtual calls which permit muting, blocking cameras, multitasking. You get the feeling people dont really want to talk to each other.  They dont want all the drama, transparency, time needed to invest.

This can play a serious role in the ability to have meaningful conversations which are critical to the work place. While many nurses are cheery and able to have conversations, some nurses really struggle. They don't know how to deal with emotions in conversations and any confrontation is typically drama filled due to the lack of experience having hard conversations.

What used to be a daily occurrence is now almost a lost art. The good news is that the skill can be learned and mastered, allowing for joyful and serious communications to occur without a major event. There are a few key points to mastering the art of conversation and confrontation.

1. Know yourself - There are some great tools to discern your personality type. They are great assessments that help you identify your personality, favorite style of interaction.
2. Know your team - These same principles apply to the team you work with. It helps to understand how each person scores so that you can understand more about what makes each person tick.
3. Acknowledge your emotions - It is normal in a day, whether at home or work, that you will have an assortment of emotions (anger, joy, playfulness, sadness, etc). It is OK to have any of these, or all of these. If something or someone has made you angry, own it.
4. Start all complaints with the person involved, not everyone else - gossip does not solve anything . It is gossip when you talk about the issue with the rest of your work mates. This causes division and emotions to build that can fracture the workplace and make it a drag to be there. 
5. Have your conversations in private - make them factual, not emotional. Use I’ statements not You. And stay committed to get resolve. That may mean taking the high road, apologizing. Nurses are the most trusted profession so we need to start with each other. Honest, direct conversations.  

If you are not comfortable speaking, talking in serious conversations or need to master skills for crucial conversations you may want to check these out:

a. Toast Masters www.toastmasters.org
b. Top 5 Leadership Personality Tests http://www.doseofleadership.com/top-5-leadership-personality-tests/   (your facility or organization probably has one of these tools)
c. Crucial Conversations and Crucial Confrontations - two great books that will tell you a lot about you and those you want to relate better with  

While it may take some practice to master the art of communication, start by being sincere and dont stop until you get it right. Lay your device down, sit relaxed, make eye contact, listen well and hear what they are saying.  You will learn much, grow more and become the best team member ever!

Jlg5.9.18(c)

Comments

Popular Posts