New Consciousness Review Summer 2015 | Page 39

RAISING CONSCIOUS KIDS which should improve this faculty would be the education par excellence.” Rather than simply training our children’s minds to absorb and regurgitate facts so that they can do well on standardized tests, mindfulness has the potential to promote other valuable cognitive skills, such as creative thinking, perspective-taking, and innovative problem solving. These skills are critical to our collective capability for addressing the challenging problems we face today. Practicing mindful awareness also supports the social and emotional dimensions of development by promoting an ethos of caring and compassion. Furthermore, it provides us with the tools to become more aware of our emotional experiences and to better regulate our emotions, skills that are critical to building successful social relationships with others. Mindful Listening An important dimension of care involves the way we listen. In order to respond with care, we need to be attentive, listen with an open mind, and be receptive to our students and their families so we can understand and empathize with their experience and recognize their needs. This involves bringing mindful awareness to the act of listening. The listening process helps us attune to another. As we listen, we gather our full attention and notice both the internal and external dimensions of our experience. We notice the sound of the other person’s voice—the tone, the volume, and so forth. We notice the other’s facial expressions, and we listen to her or his words without automatically judging them and reacting to them. At the same time we notice our internal experience—our thoughts and feelings—without judgment. We can practice mindful listening throughout the day. We can do simple things, such as taking a brief moment to give a student our full attention. We can get down to her or his level and make eye contact when the student is speaking. This communicates that we care about our students and that what they have to say is important. When we give our students our full, openhearted, nonjudgmen- 39 | NEW CONSCIOUSNESS REVIEW tal attention, we are more likely to hear the needs they are expressing, rather than unconsciously imposing our own ideas (or the institution’s ideas) of what the student should need. I used to assume that caring for others required solving their problems and fixing things for them. However, this tendency disconnected me from the present moment. Rather than truly listening and giving the other person my full attention, my thoughts would wander to the cause of their problem and how to fix it. I also noticed that this tendency to figure out and fix others’ problems arose from my deep discomfort with simply being with a person who was suffering. Being deeply and mindfully listened to is an incredibly powerful experience and is often all that another requires. When I invited Derek to speak with me during recess, I focused my intention on listening to him mindfully. When Derek told me that his parents were getting a divorce, I noticed the sadness in his