It was 2a.m. when I woke up (okay, I was still binging) to the noise of a loud fight in the corridor. I tried to listen but couldn't understand, but recognized the voice of my neighbor. I went out. Four of my neighbors were arguing. One was crying, both were talking over each other so much that nobody could understand anything. A man was taking out his phone to make a video.
I tried to intervene. They shouted more. At me. Somehow after a few minutes I found myself in the living room of the crying one. The fight had ended but her tears won't stop. I simply listened and said, "I totally get you." She looked at me shocked, stopped crying and said, "yeah", dazed. It was as if nobody had ever 'understood' her.
Everyone has something to say. No one’s really listening. In the age of constant communication, listening like you care has become a radical act.
We are the most connected generation in history, and somehow the loneliest.
We text in real time. We voice note our emotions. We react with fire emojis and crying faces. We comment, like, repost, and reply. And yet, in all this noise, one essential skill is vanishing: The ability to truly listen.
Algorithms constantly reward expression, not reception. The ability to get reactions - the more extreme the better. So we're forgetting the skill of reception. Maybe our brains collectively decided on its redundancy.
Social platforms train us to speak, to post, to perform. But where in that feedback loop are we taught to absorb?
We scroll past nuance. We skim over vulnerability.
We interrupt, assume, and reply before the other person finishes. We’re not in a conversation. We’re in a comment section.
The Age of Reactive Connection
The dominant form of interaction online is not dialogue. It’s reaction. A heart. A like. A flame. A retweet.
These are not acts of listening. They’re signals of 'I don't care enough to talk', shortcuts to avoid deeper engagement.
In DMs and group chats, we don't wait for full thoughts, we anticipate them. We preempt, jump in, steer conversations back toward ourselves. Listening has become anxious, impatient, and often performative.
We know how to respond. But do we know how to receive?
AI is Making Us Worse at Listening
AI is making everyone a writer of engaging content. It's making them all viral. AI-generated bots liking AI-generated content that AI decides for me to see. Or ignore.
And now LinkedIn feeds us comment suggestions. Even comments are equivalent to emojis. Why think when you can click and move on? Why read the whole post when it's probably AI-generated?
Social Media Made Us Performers, Not Listeners
The platforms that claim to connect us have wired us for self-broadcasting. You don’t share to be heard. You share to be seen. And when everyone is “posting through it,” no one is actually holding space for anyone else.
Whether it's a reaction video or an apology video, none of them invite a conversation, because culturally, we're unable to listen and empathize, and now we're unable to expect it.
Deep Listening is Becoming a Rare Skill
Ask yourself: When was the last time you gave someone your undivided attention?When was the last time you listened not to reply, but to understand?
It’s been a while. Right?
The truth is, deep listening requires discomfort. It means slowing down. Pausing your ego. Making space for silence. And in a culture that worships polarity, certainty, and virality, those are radical moves.
Empathy can be the New Counterculture
If the 2010s were about finding your voice, the 2030s might be about reclaiming your ears.
Because as digital life continues to flatten complexity and fracture attention, the most subversive thing you can do is really care about someone’s inner world. Not just acknowledge it. Not just like it. But sit with it, in its mess, its slowness, its full humanity.
That’s the kind of connection algorithms can’t monetize. Or maybe they'll find a way to do that too!
Reclaiming Our Humanity...
Listening is no longer just a social grace. It’s a form of resistance. In a world built to fragment us, to distract us, to keep us endlessly reacting, choosing to listen is choosing to repair.
So when you hear someone talk to you IRL next time, ask: When was the last time you stayed quiet long enough to hear something new?
#NeighborhoodStories #ConflictResolution #Empathy #Listening #Community