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Rise Above Your Norm: Learning to Listen When It Matters Most By BigmommaJ

In the world of addiction and mental health, people are often told what to do long before they are ever truly heard.

Advice is given quickly. Solutions are offered prematurely. Judgments—spoken or unspoken—fill the space where understanding should be.

But healing does not begin with advice.
It begins with being heard.

Active listening is more than a communication skill. Within addiction and mental health, it is a form of intervention—one that creates safety, builds trust, and allows individuals to begin making sense of their own experiences.

According to the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, establishing trust and therapeutic connection is foundational to engagement in both mental health and substance use treatment. Active listening is one of the primary ways that connection is built.

What It Means to Truly Listen

Active listening is not about staying quiet while someone speaks. It is about being fully present—mentally, emotionally, and physically.

It means:

*Listening without planning a response

*Hearing what is said and what is felt

*Sitting in silence when words are hard to find

*Responding in a way that reflects understanding, not control

Rooted in the work of Carl Rogers, this approach emphasizes empathy, unconditional positive regard, and authenticity. These are not just therapeutic ideals—they are necessities when working with individuals who have experienced trauma, stigma, and systemic harm.

Addiction, Mental Health, and the Experience of Not Being Heard

For many individuals living with addiction and mental illness, not being heard is not a one-time experience—it is a pattern.

It shows up in different ways:
Being labeled instead of understood
Being corrected instead of supported
Being silenced instead of validated
Over time, this creates distance—not just from others, but from self. When someone’s voice is consistently dismissed, they begin to question their own reality.

Research on motivational interviewing highlights that empathy and reflective listening significantly improve engagement and outcomes in substance use treatment (Miller & Rollnick, 2013). This reinforces a critical truth: people are more likely to change when they feel understood, not when they feel judged.

A Deeper Reflection: The Silence That Stays

There is a particular kind of silence that follows not being heard.

Not the peaceful kind—but the heavy kind.
The kind that teaches a person to stop explaining.
To stop reaching.
To stop trusting that anyone will actually listen

In the context of addiction and mental health, that silence can become dangerous. Because when people stop feeling heard, they often start coping in other ways—ways that numb, avoid, or disconnect.

And yet, something shifts when even one person listens differently.

Not to fix.
Not to analyze

Not to respond with the “right” words.

But simply to understand.

That kind of listening can interrupt cycles that have existed for years. It can create a moment where someone feels seen—not as a diagnosis, not as a problem—but as a person.

Listening as a Trauma-Informed Practice

Trauma-informed care is built on safety, trust, and empowerment. Active listening is how those principles come to life in real interactions.

The Canadian Psychological Association emphasizes that ethical psychological care requires respect, dignity, and responsiveness to individuals’ lived experiences. Listening is how that respect is demonstrated.

In practice, this means:

*Avoiding “why” questions that feel interrogative

*Allowing individuals to tell their story at their own pace

*Validating emotions without minimizing or correcting

*Recognizing the impact of power dynamics in conversations

Especially in systems like child welfare and addiction services, where individuals may already feel controlled or judged, listening becomes a way to restore autonomy.

What Active Listening Looks Like in Practice

Active listening is not complex—but it is intentional.

Instead of:
“You need to stop using or things will get worse.”
Shift to:
“It sounds like part of you wants things to change, but another part isn’t sure how. Can you tell me more about that?”

Instead of:
“Why would you go back to that situation?”
Shift to:
“Help me understand what led you back there.”

These subtle shifts reduce defensiveness and invite exploration rather than shame.

Rising Above the Norm

The norm—especially in high-pressure systems—is to move quickly, assess rapidly, and intervene decisively.

But rising above that norm requires something different.

It requires slowing down.
It requires choosing connection over control. It requires recognizing that sometimes the most effective intervention is not doing more—but listening better.

In everyday life, this might look like:

*Putting distractions away when someone is speaking

*Reflecting back what is heard instead of offering immediate advice

Asking, “Do you want support, or do you need me to just listen?”

Sitting with discomfort instead of trying to fix it

These are small shifts—but they carry significant weight.

Closing Reflection
Healing does not happen in spaces where people feel judged, rushed, or dismissed. It happens in spaces where people feel heard.

Active listening is not passive.
It is intentional.
It is disciplined.
And in the context of addiction and mental health, it is transformative.

Because sometimes, the first step in helping someone rise above their norm…is being the first person who truly listens.

BigmommaJ
#Insight #activelistening #FeelingHeard #heal

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