
The Difference Between Listening and Understanding
We often talk about listening.
We listen to the birds singing.
We listen to the wind moving through the leaves.
But do we really hear them?
Or has it simply become background noise?
Too often… we do the same with people.
Especially with our partners.
Comfort settles in.
Familiarity takes over.
Expectations are formed.
We think we know them.
And because we think we know them…
We assume we know what they are going to say, what they mean, and how it will land.
So we listen to the sound of their voice…
But we stop hearing the message.
And sometimes - the most important part of the message…
Is not even spoken.
Because we all do it.
We hide the parts that feel too painful.
We divert the conversation to what feels safer.
We speak around the truth instead of into it.
But the body doesn’t lie.
So we react.
We raise our voices.
We defend.
We argue about what feels easier to hold onto.
Because it is far easier to fight about something we can defend…
than to sit with the parts that feel too vulnerable to expose.
And so the real conversation never happens.
Communication is not just about talking.
And it is not just about listening.
It is about hearing.
Hearing what is said.
Hearing what is not said.
Hearing without judgement.
Hearing without already preparing your response.
Because that is where understanding lives.
And without understanding…
Connection slowly fades.
“Hearing is listening to what is said. Hearing is listening to what is not said.” - Simon Sinek
If this stirred something… pause there. That’s where awareness begins.










