AFTER READING THE NEXT CONVERSATION: ARGUE LESS, TALK MORE BY JEFFERSON FISHER: 9 Lessons I Learned About Conflict, Communication, and Connection - John Korsh
AFTER READING THE NEXT CONVERSATION: ARGUE LESS, TALK MORE BY JEFFERSON FISHER: 9 Lessons I Learned About Conflict, Communication, and Connection â Tools for Healthier Dialogue (Personal Reflection)
Let me tell you a story about a couple in Houston. Married twelve years. Two kids. Mortgage. The works. On a Tuesday eveningânot unlike any otherâtheyâre sitting across from each other in a quiet kitchen. A plate of pasta between them.
The conversation starts with the dishwasher. It ends with someone storming out of the room. And if you ask either one of them what happened, theyâll both say the same thing: âWe werenât even arguing.â
Thatâs the curious part. We think conflict begins with yelling, but often, it starts in silenceâsmall silences. A withheld opinion. A delayed response.
A tension that builds not from whatâs said, but from whatâs left unsaid. We tell ourselves weâre being polite, mature even. But what weâre really doing is letting resentment thicken like fog.
This book is not about mastering debates or learning how to win verbal duels. Itâs about that fog. About how we get lost in it. And about the small shiftsâthe barely noticeable turns of phrase, the pauses, the reframingâthat can suddenly bring clarity.
Grab a copy of this book now!
AFTER READING THE NEXT CONVERSATION: ARGUE LESS, TALK MORE BY JEFFERSON FISHER: 9 Lessons I Learned About Conflict, Communication, and Connection - John Korsh
AFTER READING THE NEXT CONVERSATION: ARGUE LESS, TALK MORE BY JEFFERSON FISHER: 9 Lessons I Learned About Conflict, Communication, and Connection â Tools for Healthier Dialogue (Personal Reflection)
Let me tell you a story about a couple in Houston. Married twelve years. Two kids. Mortgage. The works. On a Tuesday eveningânot unlike any otherâtheyâre sitting across from each other in a quiet kitchen. A plate of pasta between them.
The conversation starts with the dishwasher. It ends with someone storming out of the room. And if you ask either one of them what happened, theyâll both say the same thing: âWe werenât even arguing.â
Thatâs the curious part. We think conflict begins with yelling, but often, it starts in silenceâsmall silences. A withheld opinion. A delayed response.
A tension that builds not from whatâs said, but from whatâs left unsaid. We tell ourselves weâre being polite, mature even. But what weâre really doing is letting resentment thicken like fog.
This book is not about mastering debates or learning how to win verbal duels. Itâs about that fog. About how we get lost in it. And about the small shiftsâthe barely noticeable turns of phrase, the pauses, the reframingâthat can suddenly bring clarity.
Grab a copy of this book now!