| Foundation
of Human Skills > Principles
of Interpersonal communication
Four
Principles of Interpersonal Communication
These principles
underlie the workings in real life of interpersonal communication.
They are basic to communication. We can't ignore them
Interpersonal communication
is inescapable
We can't not communicate. The very attempt not to communicate
communicates something. Through not only words, but through
tone of voice and through gesture, posture, facial expression,
etc., we constantly communicate to those around us. Through
these channels, we constantly receive communication from
others. Even when you sleep, you communicate. Remember
a basic principle of communication in general: people
are not mind readers. Another way to put this is: people
judge you by your behavior, not your intent.
Interpersonal communication
is irreversible
You can't really take back something once it has been
said. The effect must inevitably remain. Despite the instructions
from a judge to a jury to "disregard that last statement
the witness made," the lawyer knows that it can't
help but make an impression on the jury. A Russian proverb
says, "Once a word goes out of your mouth, you can
never swallow it again."
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Interpersonal communication is complicated
No form of communication is simple.
Because of the number of variables involved, even simple
requests are extremely complex. Theorists note that whenever
we communicate there are really at least six "people"
involved: 1) who you think you are; 2) who you think the
other person is; 30 who you think the other person thinks
you are; 4) who the other person thinks /she is; 5) who
the other person thinks you are; and 6) who the other
person thinks you think s/he is.
We don't actually swap ideas, we swap symbols that stand
for ideas. This also complicates communication. Words
(symbols) do not have inherent meaning; we simply use
them in certain ways, and no two people use the same word
exactly alike.
Osmo Wiio gives us some communication maxims similar to
Murphy's law (Osmo Wiio, Wiio's Laws--and Some Others
(Espoo, Finland: Welin-Goos, 1978):
- If communication can fail, it will.
- If a message can be understood in
different ways, it will be understood in just that way
which does the most harm.
- There is always somebody who knows
better than you what you meant by your message.
- The more communication there is,
the more difficult it is for communication to succeed.
These tongue-in-cheek
maxims are not real principles; they simply humorously
remind us of the difficulty of accurate communication.
(See also A commentary of Wiio's laws by Jukka Korpela.)
Interpersonal communication
is contextual
In other words, communication does not happen in isolation.
There is:
- Psychological context, which is who
you are and what you bring to the interaction. Your
needs, desires, values, personality, etc., all form
the psychological context. ("You" here refers
to both participants in the interaction.)
- Relational context, which concerns
your reactions to the other person--the "mix."
- Situational context deals with the
psycho-social "where" you are communicating.
An interaction that takes place in a classroom will
be very different from one that takes place in a bar.
- Environmental context deals with
the physical "where" you are communicating.
Furniture, location, noise level, temperature, season,
time of day, all are examples of factors in the environmental
context.
- Cultural context includes all the
learned behaviors and rules that affect the interaction.If
you come from a culture (foreign or within your own
country) where it is considered rude to make long, direct
eye contact, you will out of politeness avoid eye contact.
If the other person comes from a culture where long,
direct eye contact signals trustworthiness, then we
have in the cultural context a basis for misunderstanding.
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