Six Conversations in an Isolated World: Heather Holleman
Isolated? Wishing for connections that matter? On FamilyLife Today, Dave and Ann Wilson host author Heather Holleman, who proposes six conversations to combat loneliness and plunge relationships deeper.
Show Notes
- Sign up to receive Amberly Neese’s five-week video series, “Moving Toward Each Other in the Middle of a Divisive World.” Amberly, author and comedian, offers insights on fostering peace in our communities despite differing views.
- Find resources from this podcast at shop.familylife.com.
- See resources from our past podcasts.
- Find more content and resources on the FamilyLife's app!
- Help others find FamilyLife. Leave a review on Apple Podcast or Spotify.
- Check out all the FamilyLife's podcasts on the FamilyLife Podcast Network
About the Guest
Heather Holleman
Dr. Heather Holleman is an associate teaching professor at Penn State and has won numerous teaching awards in the last 20 years. She designs the advanced writing curriculum for the Schreyer Honors College at Penn State and trains faculty how to teach writing. She has written eight books including the best-seller Seated with Christ: Living Freely in a Culture of Comparison and an award-winning book on evangelism (co-written with her husband Ashley Holleman) called Sent: Living a Life that Invites Others to Jesus. Her forthcoming book, The Six Conversations: Pathways to Connecting in an Age of Isolation and Incivility (Fall 2022) helps fight the loneliness epidemic by inviting readers to enjoy better conversations. Heather also serves with Faculty Commons alongside Ashley in the graduate student ministry of Cru. She has two daughters and three cats, and she blogs daily at heatherholleman.com. Her podcast is “The Verb with Heather Holleman.” When she’s not writing or teaching, Heather is growing a plumcot orchard, looking for turtles and lady slipper orchids in the woods, or gathering with friends to watch movies.
About the Host
Dave & Ann Wilson
Dave and Ann Wilson are hosts of FamilyLife Today®, FamilyLife’s nationally-syndicated radio program. Dave and Ann have been married for more than 38 years and have spent the last 33 teaching and mentoring couples and parents across the country. They have been featured speakers at FamilyLife’s Weekend to Remember® marriage getaway since 1993 and have also hosted their own marriage conferences across the country. Cofounders of Kensington Church—a national, multicampus church that hosts more than 14,000 visitors every weekend—the Wilsons are the creative force behind DVD teaching series Rock Your Marriage and The Survival Guide To Parenting, as well as authors of the recently released book Vertical Marriage (Zondervan, 2019). Dave is a graduate of the International School of Theology, where he received a Master of Divinity degree. A Ball State University Hall of Fame quarterback, Dave served the Detroit Lions as chaplain for 33 years. Ann attended the University of Kentucky. She has been active alongside Dave in ministry as a speaker, writer, small-group leader, and mentor to countless wives of professional athletes. The Wilsons live in the Detroit area. They have three grown sons, CJ, Austin, and Cody, three daughters-in-law, and a growing number of grandchildren.
Episode Transcript
FamilyLife Today® with Dave and Ann Wilson – Web Version Transcript
This content has been generated by an artificial intelligence language model. While we strive for accuracy and quality, please note that the information provided will most likely not be entirely error-free or up-to-date. We recommend independently verifying the content with the originally-released audio. This transcript is provided for your personal use and general information purposes only. References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete. We do not assume any responsibility or liability for the use or interpretation of this content.
Six Conversations in an Isolated World
Guest:Heather Holleman
From the series:Six Conversations in an Isolated World (Day 1 of 2)
Air date:October 24, 2024
Heather: Generation Z, the number one priority is they want to be spoken to without judgment. Generation Z is the loneliness generation. They want conversations, where nobody is going to judge them, and they can be free to talk about what they need to talk about.
Shelby: Welcome to FamilyLife Today, where we want to help you pursue the relationships that matter most. I’m Shelby Abbott, and your hosts are Dave and Ann Wilson. You can find us at FamilyLifeToday.com.
Dave: This is FamilyLife Today.
Have you ever heard of anybody being called “The Exclamation Point Woman”?
Ann: No.
Dave: She’s sitting in the studio.
Ann: Pretty excited about it too. [Laughter]
Dave: I don’t know if it’s accurate or not. But I heard her once give a message; and she said, on campus, they call her “The Exclamation Point Professor.”
Heather: —“The Walking Exclamation Point”; yes.
Dave: That’s what you’re called.
Heather: Sometimes;—
Dave: —sometimes.
Heather: —I have been called that before, yes.
Dave: Well, we’re talking to Dr. Heather Holleman. So what does “The Exclamation Point”—
Heather: Why was I called that?
Dave: Yes, why did they call you that?
Heather: Well, I bring a lot of energy, obviously; and in the morning, in particular, I’m really energetic. [Laughter] I like to keep class super lively; there’s always a lot of fun. They always joke about how much energy I have and what my secret is to all the energy; so that’s where that came from.
Dave: I’m guessing—
Ann: —like what do you do? What’s something that you do that’s fun in class?
Heather: Well, I—
Ann: I’m thinking of college classes, I’m not imagining fun or creative.
Heather: Well, if you walk in my classroom, there’s always going to be music playing. I have the class contribute to a Spotify playlist, so I can know what kind of music everyone likes. And there’s always an attendance question, which is a really fun question everyone has to answer.
Ann:So what kind of questions do you ask?
Heather: Well, I’ll ask really fun questions. What’s the best meal you’ve ever eaten on campus? Or what’s a movie you think everyone should see and what’s a movie you think no one should see? It’s just a way to start class every single day. And then I usually have a short lecture, or they’ll have activities they have to do. I always try to bring in video and lively PowerPoints.
Ann: And this is an advanced writing class?
Heather: Yes. So they have to write, I mean, it’s intense. Right now they’re doing research projects. They have to research scholarly journals and learn how to annotate them and do all sorts of things. So it’s a hard class.
Dave:And I’m guessing your classes are sold out?
Heather: I do. I do. Yes, they come. I like to pride myself on perfect attendance. That’s not always true post covid, but yes. So no, it’s fun. I love being a college professor. I love that age.
Dave: You’ve got to be every student’s/they want to take one of your classes, I’m guessing.
Heather: I do get a lot of students, who like my class; mostly because, I really do believe in them; and I want the best for them; and I work really hard to help them achieve their goals. I’m pretty devoted to my students. Once you’re my student, you’re always my student—I’ll always be there, helping them—I get emails ten years later for if they need help with anything. Sometimes I’ll get wedding invitations, that kind of thing. So it’s fun.
Dave:I have never emailed a college prof.
Ann: I did.
Heather: Have you gone to office hours at least?
Ann: He gave me a D on a paper when I shared my faith and I felt like, did you give me a D because it was written poorly or was it the topic?
Heather: Good question, yeah.
Dave:Well, I was just thinking I’ve never emailed one because they didn’t make a mark on my life like you are. I mean, they are emailing you because you have/you’ve made a mark on their life. You’re modeling for us the book—
Heather: Yes, I’m invested.
Dave: —we’re going to talk about today, Six Conversations. I mean, before we met you, walking in the hallway, you are/you’d already asked me five questions—
Heather: I did. [Laughter]
Dave: —on the way to the studio.
Ann: Yes, she’s a great conversationalist. And the subtitle of The Six Conversations is Pathways to Connecting in an Age of Isolation and Incivility.
Heather: That’s right. I was highly motivated to research and write this book because of just the culture—not only of what I see on campus/on the college campus—but research reports coming out about how lonely and isolated people are. I was looking at this Cigna Health study of 20,000 US adults that said almost half the population reports not having meaningful conversations. And the Harvard Grant study—longest research study ever; it’s in its 85th year—they say that the single most determining factor of a happy life is warm connections/warm relationships. I was seeing the lack of that, and I thought, “I really have to do something. I have to…”
You know, teaching on the college campus, I thought, “Can I teach people how to have a loving connection?” “…how to have a really good conversation so they’re, not only less lonely?”—but as someone, who wrote the book, Sent—”I wanted people to get better in their ability to talk to each other about the things that really matter, like their faith in Jesus.”
Ann: I’m wondering—I’m thinking of the listener—“When was the last time you had a really deep, meaningful conversation?” Like just that question: I think that kind of makes us sit back and think: “Oh, is that something I have on a regular basis?” or “Is that something I haven’t had it in a long time?”
Heather: Right.
Ann: You’re saying that’s really important.
Heather: It’s really important for mental health and, also, physical health. One thing about the book: I read all the research/all the available social science research and then I, also, look at what the Bible has to say about why conversations would matter and how to have them well. I love this book because it’s practical—it’s not an academic book—but it has all the research behind it that will help you have a loving connection and get to those meaningful conversations.
Dave: Yes; it’s super, super practical.
Heather: Yes, it’s easy.
Dave: But here’s my question, I’m an introvert—
Ann: —which he’s not, by any means. [Laughter]
Heather: Yes, yes; I was looking at you, like, “Okay, someone’s not telling the truth.” [Laughter]
Dave: I’m pretending I’m an introvert—and I hear this discussion—I’m like, “Yes, but I don’t even really like to talk to people. Do I have to?”
Heather: You’re so funny, because my husband is an introvert. I say he’s like the proof of concept for this book, because he is more introverted and more reserved. But what you find is—when you see the research behind the benefits of having a warm and loving connection, and some of the mindsets that you would need in order to increase your happiness, and also live a more biblical life—you know, he was really motivated to connect in these ways. He found himself reaching out on airplanes or to friends in new ways.
Once you learn the four mindsets: they’re really easy to learn, and really transformative, and can help you really grow in your art of conversation.
Dave: Well, let’s go; let’s do it.
Ann: Well, let me say this, too—just a shout-out to the introverts—”I feel like introverts can have the deepest—
Heather: They can
Ann: —”conversations.”
Heather: That’s right; that’s right.
Ann: I mean, I’m an extrovert. I think it can be easy for some of us just to have the conversation, just on the surface level.
Dave: That’s what I do; I can easily go to a party/walk down the street, and I can talk superficial all day long.
Heather: Right.
Ann: Which I cannot do that for long. I remember being in a group at a birthday event for all my girlfriends. I love them and I want to know them, but we were talking about nothing, which is fine to do, but after a while, this is probably so rude. I’m like, “You guys we’re talking about nothingness. Let’s go deep. I want to know what’s happening in your lives,” which they probably were so offended, but it’s because I love them, and I want to know them.
Dave:We had, when we first started in our NFL Ministry with the Lions, I know I just mentioned football, but here we are and a player is over at our house, and he’s a very well-known player. I won’t even tell you who he is. He and his wife, young married, I think he was a rookie that season, and again, this is 30 years ago, and he’s still, well-known, probably be in Hall of Fame someday, Ann looks across the dinner table and says to him, “Hey, let’s talk about your marriage. How’s your marriage doing?” He literally looks at her, left the kitchen, he goes out. So I go out into the living room like, “Dude, what’s going on?”
Ann: Oh wait, let me just say I knew his wife and I knew they’re in their first year of marriage and she’s struggling a little bit. So I’m like, you guys, how are you doing? What’s going on? And then he just gets up and leaves.
Dave:Yes, and he told me, he goes, “That’s just too intimate of a question for me. I don’t even know what to say. I’m just, it’s awkward.” He had never really gone there. So coach us up. Do you not do that?
Heather: Yes, I’ll coach you up. Well, here are things. This is what I learned about what needs to happen in every conversation in order for you to have a warm connection and invite a warm connection from another person. So the—
Dave: By the way, listeners, you’d better be writing this down.
Heather: Yes, write this down.
Dave: Put this in your phone or whatever.
Ann: And think of this: you need this for your family, even.
Heather: Yes, this is perfect for how I connect with my daughters, and my husband, my neighbors, my colleagues, my students.
In every conversation, four things need to be happening:
You have to be curious;Believe the best;
Express concern;And share your life.
Now, if one of those is missing, you’re not going to have that warm and loving connection. And if you move through each of the mindsets, a lot of people are not doing well in one of those categories.
For example:
You may just not be curious about other people; but it’s a skill to develop, to ask questions to really believe that the person in front of you is like a marvelous gift to figure out: who they are; what they care about.
And believing the best: a lot of us are approaching our friends with suspicion and judgment.
And then expressing concern means that you really are invested in what’s happening with people: “What are their major stressors?” “What’s keeping them up at night?” “What major decisions do they have to make?”
And then it’s your turn to share your life, and a lot of people don’t do that well.
And all of those terms/they have research terms, like:
Interpersonal curiosity;
Positive regard;
Investment;And mutual sharing.
You know, the social science is great; but I wanted to know if the Bible supported all of that. And you find all of those mindsets in Philippians 2, where Paul says to take an interest in other people; value them above yourselves. You’ll find it in Romans 12, Galatians 6. It’s beautiful to hold up all that social science to what Scripture has already told us about the mindsets you need, first, in order to connect well with other people.
Ann: So Heather, as you go through those four, like what was missing for you, growing up?
Heather: Well, I grew up as a military child. We moved a lot, and I just experienced profound loneliness.
I think what was missing for me was expressing concern for other people, taking on their interests. I talked all the time as, maybe, you can tell; I have high articulation needs, as they say.
And then, I wasn’t good at sharing my life with people. Even though I talked a lot, I wouldn’t really share things that were going on with me; I wouldn’t be vulnerable with people.
And then, at certain seasons of my life, I struggled believing the best about people. In my marriage, we were having a really difficult season of our marriage; and it was because I was always judgmental and not believing the best about him.
Those mindsets really represent maturity for me if you can grow in all those areas as you interact with people, especially children; they want to know that you believe the best about them, that you’re not approaching them with judgment or suspicion about their lives.
Dave: I mean, if you start with “Be curious”: Are there some questions/are there some ways that you can help us? I mean, when I walked in, literally you walked right up, said, “Hello, I’m Heather”; and then you said, “Hey, tell me: you were with the Detroit Lions…blah, blah, blah…—
Heather: Yes, yes
Dave: —“I used to live in Michigan.” You were curious from the start. So obviously, as someone hearing that question, I’m like, “Wow; I like her”; you know?
Heather: Well, it does/they call that liking.
Dave: It honors; yes.
Heather: Yes; when you ask questions, it increases what’s called liking. Now, a lot of people think: “Oh, it’s rude or nosy; I don’t want to ask personal questions.”
Dave: Yes; right.
Heather: But the research shows that, when you do that—and even if it’s an inappropriate question—people like you more. Now with the football player example, it probably made him nervous because there was something that he didn’t want to talk about. But I don’t think it meant that he didn’t like you. It was more about him feeling nervous to share perhaps is the way I think about it.
But to get to curiosity, it’s really a disposition of the heart; that you really value them above yourselves. They have something to teach you. They are representing a unique facet of God. They’re going to teach you something that you would not know otherwise.
Also, I like to believe that when you’re talking to someone, every conversation has a potential to be a life-changing conversation. Have you ever had a conversation that changed your life forever?
Ann and Dave: Yes.
Heather: Yes; right?
Okay; but what I really thinking you’re asking is: “How did I come up with the questions to ask?”—is that what you were wondering?—like: “How did I know what to ask you or—
Dave: Yes. I mean, in some ways, if I’m not—again, if a listener’s not a curious person—they’re like, “Where do I start? I’m not really that curious.”
I mean, Ann does this—we would have couples over—and as they’re leaving, almost every time, as they’re leaving our house—they would, almost 100 percent, probably
100 percent—they would say something, like, “Wow! We just had the best time here tonight.” I’m sitting there, going, “I know why; all we did was talk about you all night”; you know—
Heather: Yes, yes, yes; they didn’t ask you questions back; yes.
Dave: —because Ann asked, Ann asked, Ann asked. I mean, that’s a good thing; but she is so curious, she kept asking them questions. They loved it, because it honored them.
Ann: Yes. We just had this conversation two days ago where we’re kind of opposite in terms of we get a group of people, I want to know everything about them.
Dave:Don’t tell them what we don’t.
Ann: You don’t think I should?
Dave: Oh, go ahead.
Ann: But Dave said, “Sometimes you ask too many questions. You’re like, it’s overwhelming. I think you’re overwhelming people.”
Dave:And tell them what you told me.
Ann: I said, “Sometimes you’re just telling too many stories. Who cares? Let’s ask them about them.” And so it’s this,
Dave:And you know what? She’s right.
Ann: No, and you’re probably right.
Dave:Nope, you’re right.
Ann: I think sometimes—
Heather: You guys are so funny.
Ann: I think maybe I can overwhelm someone with my questions.
Heather: Yes, it’s good not to do a rapid-fire interview. I struggle with that too. But what I love about this book and how easy it is, is it’s called The Six Conversations: Pathways to Connecting. Anytime you’re with someone, you can think of the six dimensions of what it means to be human.
Those are pathways of how to ask really great questions in each of those categories.
And then, you’re going to determine what your conversation partner actually wants to talk about.
The six dimensions of being human:
Every person you see is social; they have friends.
They’re physical, meaning their bodies and physical spaces.
They’re emotional—and a lot of people go there first—like: “How are you feeling?” “How are you doing?”
They’re cognitive, which means they’re thinking about things. That’s actually my favorite question to ask people is: “What have you been thinking about lately?” I often don’t say: “How are you feeling?” or “How are you today?” I’ll say, “I haven’t seen you in a while; what have you been thinking about?” I learn so much just asking that question.
The last two categories are volitional and spiritual:
Volitional means that everyone you meet makes choices—that’s human volition—your ability to make choices and act on them. It’s really about decisions people are making; what choices they’re making; how they decided something. I like asking people that—especially, if they’re wearing something new—I’ll say, “I love your outfit; how did you decide to wear that dress?” or “How did you decide to buy that dress?” Just ask them their decision-making process: “What went into it?”
Ann: She just asked me this in the bathroom, by the way. [Laughter]
Heather: Yes.
And then spiritual is my favorite category. It’s hard to start in the spiritual category, but you can; you can ask people: “You know, I haven’t seen you in a while, I would love to know just what have you been thinking about God?” It’s more awkward because, if you don’t know the person well, it’s hard to ask a question in that category.
I love using the structure of the six conversations, because you’ll never get lost in conversation again. And whatever someone answers, you have endless permutations of where to go next. So when I asked Dave about the time with football—if you noticed, I was interested in what it—
—the impact it had on your body; that’s physical. I wanted to know, “Did you have injuries?” And I didn’t know if you wanted to talk about it; so I was listening, like, “Is he answering in more than one word?” “Does he seem animated about it?”
You wanted to tell the story about the longest pass—you know, the interception; I won’t bring it up—[Laughter]—but I was just noticing: “What does he want to talk about?”
But I could have asked a social question, like, “What were your favorite friendships from that time?”
Or cognitive, you know, “What were you thinking about when that…” Well, I actually did ask you that, after the football pass: “What was that like?” “How did…”—whatever.
Spiritually, I asked, “How did you handle that? You weren’t a Christian yet. What did/how did you recover?”
And then, I could have gone on and on, based on whatever you answered. I just could have run down the list and observed the category that you liked talking about most.
Dave: That’s interesting—that as you recall that conversation—you were, literally, going through—
Ann: She’s going through the whole process.
Heather: Yes, yes; it’s easy!
Dave: On the other side of that—even reading your book, The Six Conversations—I didn’t even know you were doing it.
Heather: Right; so it’s not artificial.
Dave: It just felt like a conversation.
Heather: Yes; a lot of people are like, “Isn’t this artificial?—you’re going down a list.”
Ann: —or “…formula?”
Heather: No; it’s paying attention, and being really curious, and figuring out what people love to talk about; and you can have a really warm connection.
So often, people love to talk about their bodies and physical spaces; but nobody asks questions about that. So asking them, for example, how they’ve been sleeping at night; people actually like to talk about sleeping: their sleep rituals, how they’re sleeping.
Or especially with older people, they often like and need to talk about the changes, like pain they’re experiencing, and having someone listen to what it’s like to grow older.
People also love to be able to process decision-making; things like that.
Dave: It’s interesting, as I’m looking at your four mindsets, I’m thinking about a parent with their children. And the second one: “Believe the best” is so critical.
Heather: Yes, yes, yes; huge.
Dave: Because as I’m looking at that, if I’m not believing the best about my teenage daughter or son—let’s say hypothetical—this whole conversation goes a different way;—
Heather: It falls apart.
Dave: —I get curious for a wrong reason. I’m asking you questions, because I’m trying to catch you in something.
Heather: Right; exactly.
Dave: Because I’m believing you’re doing something behind my back. I’m expressing concern—which is really not that I really care about you—I want to stop this behavior. And then, I share my own story; it could go the other way. So that “Believe the best” is critical; am I right?
Heather: It is; in fact, the whole structure falls apart if one of the mindsets is missing; and you’re absolutely right.
I have people, who are very curious about me; they might even express concern; they might share their life; but I know that they are already judging me, or they don’t believe the best about me.
Or the other three mindsets could be true—they believe the best; they maybe will express concern; and share their life—but they will not ask me one question about my life.
I spent time with the couple. My husband and I are really excited to spend time with them. Our families were together. We spent eight hours. They did not ask us one question about our lives. We left feeling lonely, disconnected, and really unsatisfied with how that went. We could ask them a lot of questions, but it was never kind of returned. And that’s really hard. It’s a real challenge to people to think: “Be curious,” “Believe the best,” “Express concern,” “Share your life.” If you don’t share your life, it comes off as an interview.
Ann: Oh, yes.
Dave: Yes.
Heather: So you need that last one.
Ann: See hon! You’re sharing your life!
Heather: Yes, you’re sharing your life.
Dave: That’s what I’m doing, honey.
Ann: That’s right!
Heather: You’re doing good, because a lot of people don’t understand why you need all four. You got right to what’s going to happen if I don’t believe the best.
And Generation Z, the number one priority is they want to be spoken to without judgment. If you look at the studies on belonging—Generation Z is the loneliest generation—they want conversations, where nobody’s going to judge them, and they can be free to talk about what they need to talk about.
I think about that, when I’m with my students, or with people who believe totally different things than I do. I just want to believe the best; there’s a story behind why they believe what they believe—and me trying to figure out that story—and not judge them. Even if it’s a completely wild political opinion I don’t agree with, or maybe behavior that I think is wrong—instead of judging them—I want to know the story: “Tell me how you decided to do that,” or “Tell me more about how you arrived at this political position; I’m really curious.”
And they’ll know if you’re believing the best; they’ll know; they can tell. So you have to really believe it, in your heart, that people are trying to do their best. There’s always a story behind why they believe what they believe.
Dave:Well, it’s also interesting if you think about the be curious if a person isn’t curious. Again, I’m making a judgment here. It sort of indicates if I’m not asking questions about people I know even my own spouse, I’m selfish. I really don’t care. It’s all about me. It’s like, what would that look like in a marriage to say, “Your interests are more important than mine.” Philippians 2 Have the same mindset that Christ had. Just apply that to your marriage. You would probably start with, “I need to ask her some questions.” “I need to ask him.” “I want to know my spouse.” And so often—
Ann: This is good.
Dave: —we drift toward isolation because we’re just not willing to have the conversation to say, “This conversation is not about me. I want to love you and it’s going to start this way. Tell me about your day.”
Heather: Yes, or here’s a great question if you feel disconnected from your spouse, or children, or anyone, you can say, “We haven’t connected in a while, what question are you hoping I’ll ask you about your life?”
Ann: That’s a good one.
Heather: And with my husband, he loves the physical category. He loves physical spaces, physical processes. When I ask about woodworking or take a real interest in anything he’s building, a system or whatever, he loves that. He knows that I love the cognitive category, and I love talking about what I’m learning in scripture. So it’s an act of love to know what your spouse and children like to talk about.
My children love to talk about their friends; they love to talk about music, food. They don’t want me to ask them what their deep thoughts are about a passage of Scripture they read; they don’t want that right now. [Laughter]
Ann: Right.
Heather: I just like to get the warm connection, based on what they enjoy talking about.
Dave: I had two thoughts, but if I think back to our 10th year, which our listeners know about, it’s the year that Ann said, “I’ve lost my feelings for you.” When we were coming through that, one of the things you said to me on when we go out on a date, you said, “Would you ask me this question on our dates?” And she said, “Write this down.” So this is back in the pencil and paper days. I literally get out of things. She says, “Just ask me this when we go out.” “What’s that?” “How are you doing?” And I’m like, “How are you doing?” That’s what she goes, “You don’t ask me that.”
And as I realized my whole life was about me. The reason she lost feelings for me is I’m all about me, my job, my ministry, my future. I’m never stopping to just ask that simple question. Be curious. “How are you doing as a mom, as my wife?”
And so my answer to you on the other side is, there have been many times I’ve asked a wife, “So what’s your husband literally do at work?” And they’re like, “I don’t know; something to do with computers.” I’m like, “Your husband really would love to talk about that. That is real important to us.” “This is what I do all day.”
And again, some husband may be going “I don’t really want her to know.” That’s what/I love it, when you [Ann] ask me: “Tell me about your job,”—like—“You’re writing a sermon; what’s it about?” “Why are you going this way instead of that way?” “ What did you feel when you’re on stage?”
Heather: Ohh, that’s volitional.
Dave: —all that kind of stuff.
Heather: You want people to ask you: “Hey, how did you decide to do that passage?” You like the volitional
Dave: Yes. And make that move. Even in an interview, “Why did you go there?”
Heather: That’s the coach coming out, like the plays. “How are you choosing to do that? What do you see that we don’t see in the future that made you decide to do that?”
Dave: There you go.
Ann: And I think one other great application for today would be to ask your husband/to ask your kids this question: “Do you feel like I believe the best in you?”
Heather: Yes, they know; they know.
Ann: They totally know the answer. And I would say this, too. Pray before you have that conversation, because especially if you have teenagers, our kids spoke truth to us, man, and it was hard to hear sometimes. And so ask God to give you the ears to hear what they have to say.
Dave: And when they say—because they may say, “I do not believe you believe the best,” —do not get in an argument.
Heather: Yes, apologize. [Laughter]
Ann: Yes, don’t get defensive.
Dave: Say, “You’re right;—
Ann: —”tell me more.”
Dave: —”tell me more: ‘Why do you feel that way?’ And listen, because I think God wants to grow you.
Heather: That is so good, Ann.
The other thing that is good with kids is to let them know you’re carrying their burdens with them—Galatians 6—to find out what their major stressors are. After you ask that, say, “Look I really want to help carry your burdens and pray for you.” Let them unburden themselves: “What are the major stressors?” “What thoughts are keeping you up at night?”
Shelby: We will hear more from Ann and Heather in a few seconds about how to get your kids to open up when you ask them questions. I know you want to hear that. I do too. But first, I’m Shelby Abbott, and you’ve been listening to Dave and Ann Wilson with Heather Holleman on FamilyLife Today.
I must say Heather’s a friend of mine and what you’ve heard in this conversation today, Heather’s bubbly personality, the way she asks questions and engages in answering questions, this is who she is. She is authentic. This is the exact same on who she is in real life, and I love that about her. She’s so authentic and so caring, and so kind, and just a really fun person to be around.
She’s also written a book called The Six Conversations: Pathways to Connecting In An Age of Isolation and Incivility. You can get your copy of Heather’s book by going online right now to FamilyLifeToday.com, or you can find a link to it in the show notes. Or feel free to give us a call at 800-358-6329 to request your copy of The Six Conversations. Again, the number is 800-F as in family, L as in life, and then the word TODAY.
We’ve been talking about conversations and how to engage with people, and we’re living in a tense time right now. There’s a lot of division in social media, family gatherings, or maybe even around your own kitchen table. But what do we do since Psalm 133 calls us as believers to live in unity with one another? It’s kind of difficult to do that. Right?
Well, that’s why I’m so excited to invite you to join us for a five-week video series from our friend, author, and comedian Amberly Neese. It’s called “Moving Toward Each Other in the Middle of a Divisive World.” You can hear from Amberly as she guides us on how to build peace in our own backyards when our differing thoughts and opinions and beliefs threatened to really just create division. And so we are really excited about this. If you want to go to the show notes, you could find a link to this five-part video series, or you could head over to FamilyLife.com/FindingCommonGround. Again, that’s FamilyLife.com/FindingCommonGround.
Okay, here’s more from Ann and Heather about how to get your kids to open up when you ask them questions.
Ann: My adult son just said, “I don’t like it when you do this,”—is I would say, “I’m worried about you,”—I thought I was being empathetic, like, “Oh, I care about you,” He said, “What I hear you saying is: ‘You’re failing,’ and ‘I don’t like what I’m seeing.’”
To which I said, “Oh, that’s not what I’m feeling at all, but I’m concerned you’re not…”; you know? I’m like, “Oh, I’ve never thought of it.” He said, “It feels disrespectful to me.”
Heather: Wow; I wonder if you had changed the verb, like, “I’m so curious, ‘How is this going?”
Ann: “’How’s it going?’”
Heather: Yes, or “I’m really interested in how you guys are working on this thing.”
Ann: But that word, “worried,” communicates that I’m not trusting him with what he’s dealing with.
Heather: You’re actually right-on with choosing the right word in the question. That’s why questions like, “How was your day?” never land well. People hate the verb, “was,”—it’s too existential—it doesn’t land well in the brain; it’s actually stressful for the brain, according to neuroscience.
So when you put a strong verb in there—don’t say to your children: “How was your day?”—instead, say: “Did anything surprise you about your day?”
Ann: Awesome.
Heather: “Did anything challenge you?” “ Did anything make you laugh?” They will open up, and it will be a really delightful conversation.
Shelby: Now coming up tomorrow, in a world that’s really just divided by incivility and anger, Heather Holleman is going to help us along with Dave and Ann Wilson, to rediscover how to have engaging conversations that connect us. That’s coming up tomorrow. We hope you’ll join us.
On behalf of Dave and Ann Wilson, I’m Shelby Abbott. We’ll see you back next time for another edition of FamilyLife Today.
FamilyLife Today is a donor-supported production of FamilyLife®, a Cru® Ministry.
Helping you pursue the relationships that matter most.
If you’ve benefited from the FamilyLife Today transcripts, would you consider donating today to help defray the costs of producing them and making them available online?
Copyright © 2024 FamilyLife. All rights reserved.
www.FamilyLife.com