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Sound of silence between words: Art of being fully present

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Listening and observing fully urges one to engage deeply with the world around them to forge genuine connections, enrich lives, and experience the full spectrum of human interaction

Touseful Islam

Publisted at 1:52 PM, Thu Nov 7th, 2024

In a world perpetually submerged in the clamour of our own thoughts and the ceaseless rush of daily life, Ernest Hemingway’s assertion that "when people talk, listen completely" invites us to pause, to truly hear, and—most vitally—to feel what is being shared.

For in the delicate dance of human interaction, there lies an art so rarely practised, yet profoundly transformative: the art of listening with not just our ears, but with our entire being.

Hemingway’s wisdom goes beyond mere advice; it serves as a clarion call for an act so simple, yet so complex, that it borders on the sacred: To listen without preconception, without the temptation to prepare a response before the other person has even finished speaking.

How often do we, in the midst of a conversation, already begin to form our reply, our counterpoint, or our rebuttal?

Most of us, it seems, listen only with half of ourselves, our attention divided and fragmented by thoughts of the next word we’ll utter rather than the sentiments being conveyed by the speaker.

In truth, true listening is a rarity, a quality that invites vulnerability, humility, and the courage to be fully engaged with the present moment.

This call for presence resonates far beyond the spoken word.

Hemingway urges us to observe—not merely the surface details of our environment, but the deeper, unseen layers that shape every room, every moment, and every interaction.

"You should be able to go into a room and when you come out know everything that you saw there," Hemingway wrote. Yet, how many of us truly "see" when we enter a room? 

How many of us are alert to the subtle shifts in energy, the unspoken tensions or joys, that fill the space?

Too often, our minds are preoccupied with a thousand other things: What we must do, what we have forgotten, and, inevitably, what we want to avoid. In this rush, we miss the deeper essence of the world around us.

The world we inhabit, Hemingway suggests, is not just a series of objects and events that pass us by like the fleeting images on a screen.

It is, in fact, a complex interplay of energies and emotions that demand our attention. The room, as Hemingway so eloquently puts it, is not merely a physical space; it is an experience.

Every room has a mood—sometimes palpable, sometimes subtle, but always present—shaped by the energy of those within it. 

A cozy room filled with laughter, a tense space where unspoken words hang in the air, or a silent room that holds a thousand forgotten memories—all of these are more than just rooms.

They are repositories of feeling, texture, and energy, if only we have the presence of mind to notice.

To listen and observe fully is, in essence, to open oneself to the richness of existence itself. It requires more than passive attention; it calls for an active engagement with the world, one that demands of us a heightened awareness of both the big and the small.

To listen attentively is to absorb not just the words but the emotion behind them, the unspoken subtext that lies beneath the surface.

Similarly, to observe is to see not only the object before us, but to sense the atmosphere that surrounds it—the light, the shadows, the invisible threads of connection between people and places.

And herein lies the extraordinary magic of Hemingway’s directive: When we commit to listening deeply and observing acutely, we become more attuned to the very pulse of life.

We begin to notice the way a friend’s voice softens when they speak of something dear to them or the slight shift in their body language that betrays a hidden truth. We hear the unspoken words in the silence between sentences, and we recognise the emotional landscape that gives form to the spaces we inhabit.

With this heightened awareness comes a richer experience of life, one in which we are no longer mere passive observers, but active participants in the dance of human connection.

This practice of true presence is not, as Hemingway suggests, a skill one acquires overnight. It is, rather, a lifelong journey of refinement, of becoming ever more attuned to the delicate nuances of the world around us.

But the rewards are immeasurable.

In a world where so many are locked in their own heads, distracted and disengaged, the person who listens with their whole heart and observes with the deepest of attentions becomes a rare and treasured soul.

Their presence is not just felt, but "experienced"—a gift in a world that often seems too fast, too loud, and too shallow.

To listen completely, to observe with the full force of our faculties, is to live intentionally.

It means to fully embrace the present, to give ourselves over to the moment in all its complexity. It means to hear not only the words spoken, but also the silences that stretch between them; to see not just the objects before us, but the emotions, the histories, and the energies that imbue them with meaning. 

In this act of profound engagement, life becomes richer, deeper, and more meaningful.

For in truly listening and observing, we not only understand others more fully, but we also begin to understand ourselves.

And in this understanding, we find the deepest form of connection—the kind that transcends mere conversation, the kind that nourishes the soul.

Thus, Hemingway’s words are not just an admonition to listen and observe—they are a call to be fully present in our own lives.

To absorb, to feel, and to connect. For in doing so, we unlock the door to a life not only well-lived, but deeply "felt" in every sense of the word.

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