DO YOU KNOW HOW TO LISTEN IN FRENCH? FIND OUT HERE!
So, have you ever listened to silence?
It sounds weird, we’re all so busy, it’s difficult to sit still.
You’d be surprised about how many details you miss out on!
Plus, this skill will make you a much better French speaker, because it helps you to hear all the words the French are saying.
Check out the article below for some tips on how to be still which will allow you to listen ever so much better, and watch the video for some French worth listening to!
(This week: the verb ÉCOUTER – to listen)
Be Still.
By Leo Babauta
Be still.
Just for a moment.
Listen to the world around you. Feel your breath coming in and going out. Listen to your thoughts. See the details of your surroundings.
Be at peace with being still.
In this modern world, activity and movement are the default modes, if not with our bodies then at least with our minds, with our attention. We rush around all day, doing things, talking, emailing, sending and reading messages, clicking from browser tab to the next, one link to the next.
We are always on, always connected, always thinking, always talking. There is no time for stillness — and sitting in front of a frenetic computer all day, and then in front of the hyperactive television, doesn’t count as stillness.
This comes at a cost:
we lose that time for contemplation, for observing and listening. We lose peace.
And worse yet: all the rushing around is often counterproductive. I know, in our society action is all-important — inaction is seen as lazy and passive and unproductive. However, sometimes too much action is worse than no action at all. You can run around crazily, all sound and fury, but get nothing done. Or you can get a lot done — but nothing important. Or you can hurt things with your actions, make things worse than if you’d stayed still.
And when we are forced to be still — because we’re in line for something, or waiting at a doctor’s appointment, or on a bus or train — we often get antsy, and need to find something to do. Some of us will have our mobile devices, others will have a notebook or folder with things to do or read, others will fidget. Being still isn’t something we’re used to.
Take a moment to think about how you spend your days — at work, after work, getting ready for work, evenings and weekends. Are you constantly rushing around? Are you constantly reading and answering messages, checking on the news and the latest stream of information? Are you always trying to Get Lots of Things Done, ticking off tasks from your list like a machine, rushing through your schedule?
Is this how you want to spend your life?
If so, peace be with you. If not, take a moment to be still. Don’t think about what you have to do, or what you’ve done already. Just be in the moment.
Then after a minute or two of doing that, contemplate your life, and how you’d like it to be. See your life with less movement, less doing, less rushing. See it with more stillness, more contemplation, more peace.
Then be that vision.
It’s pretty simple, actually: all you have to do is sit still for a little bit each day. Once you’ve gotten used to that, try doing less each day. Breathe when you feel yourself moving too fast. Slow down. Be present. Find happiness now, in this moment, instead of waiting for it.
Savor the stillness. It’s a treasure, and it’s available to us, always.
From the Tao Te Ching:
It is not wise to dash about.
Shortening the breath causes much stress.
Use too much energy, and
You will soon be exhausted.
That is not the Natural Way.
Whatever works against this Way
Will not last long.
NOW IT IS YOUR TURN!
Tell us in the comments below, what is one thing that you find challenging about your French accent or pronunciation, and what will you do about it in this month?
Let me guess.
Do you constantly have the feeling that you can’t hear what the French say and you don’t know how to read all the French words because they are written so much differently than they sound?
Learn 3 secrets that will help you be self sufficient in the way you pronounce French words – even if you don’t know what they mean – so that you can read that sophisticated menu in your favorite French restaurant.
Immerse yourself as you FINALLY reach your dream of becoming bilingual, learn to speak Parisian French on Skype and BREAK your language barrier!
…and now, please SHARE this article with your friends. They’ll love you for it! : )
Always in your corner,
Llyane
Photo credit: Wikimedia Commons, Marc Nouss
I have difficulty listening to the liaisons in the French language. It seems to me when I am listening to a fluent user of the French language, he or she almost skips over words and I miss the translation because I am trying to figure out the word I just missed. It slows me down and I miss the meaning.
To improve my listening skills I listen to lots of French musicians. I have a good-sized CD collection from Alizee to Zazie. Also when I can get the chance, I listen to RFI (radio france internationale) on the Internet. I find if I have that playing softly in the background while I’m doing my research work or checking email I actually subliminally pick up more French. It’s weird, but it works.
Amazing, Christine, good work!
It seems to me as though you still miss the translation because you need to slow down, as you describe.
Passive listening can help up to a certain point, it looks to me that you need to practice active listening to get to the bottom of this frustration and enjoy your French 🙂
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