Conversations nowadays are more likely to devolve into arguments because people are less willing to compromise and listen to each other, instead making decisions based only on their preexisting beliefs. A balanced conversation requires equal parts talking and listening, but unfortunately that balance has been lost as people communicate more through texts than face to face interactions.
Conversations nowadays are more likely to devolve into arguments because people are less willing to compromise and listen to each other, instead making decisions based only on their preexisting beliefs. A balanced conversation requires equal parts talking and listening, but unfortunately that balance has been lost as people communicate more through texts than face to face interactions.
Conversations nowadays are more likely to devolve into arguments because people are less willing to compromise and listen to each other, instead making decisions based only on their preexisting beliefs. A balanced conversation requires equal parts talking and listening, but unfortunately that balance has been lost as people communicate more through texts than face to face interactions.
In this world, in which every conservation has the potential to devolve
into an argument. Nowadays, there is a big chance that conversation
can devolve into an argument because we’re less likely to compromise, which means we’re not listening to each other. Usually, we tend to make decisions based on what we already believe. A conversation requires a balance between talking and listening. Unfortunately, we lost that balance.
According to Pew Research, about a third of american teenagers send more than a hundred texts a day than they talk to their text mates face to face.