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Life Kit

To give better advice, try less fixing and more listening

Life Kit

NPR

Health & Fitness, Self-improvement, Kids & Family, Education, Business

4.33.9K Ratings

🗓️ 25 February 2020

⏱️ 20 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

When someone comes to you for advice, where do you start? This very meta episode of Life Kit explores how to give good advice to the people you care about. Hint: it's not always about fixing someone's problems.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is NPR's Life Kit. I'm Meredith Goldstein, long-time advice columnist for the Boston Globe

0:05.7

and host of the Love Letters podcast, and I'm thrilled to be joining Life Kit today.

0:11.6

As a professional advice giver, I help a lot of people with their problems, in real life and

0:16.2

online. But what question that's always hard to answer is, how do you give advice? Like, what makes a

0:22.3

person good at giving advice to others? We all wind up being called on for advice by the people in

0:28.0

our lives, our friends, family, our significant others, and it doesn't always go well. If you say

0:34.2

the wrong thing to a friend, it might strain the relationship. Tell your girlfriend what to do,

0:39.7

and she might tell you where you can go. So in today's very meta episode of Life Kit,

0:46.7

I, an advice columnist, will explore how to give good advice to the people you care about.

0:52.0

As one of my favorite advice columnists, John Paul Brammer, who writes Ola Pappi, says,

0:57.6

advice isn't one person telling another person what to do. It's a conversation, a partnership.

1:03.7

There are no points to be one. You're both just human beings sort of collaborating on the project

1:08.5

of being a person. And seeing it that way for all its messiness, I think, can leave a lot of room for growth.

1:16.3

To get us some good tips for how to give advice, I went to several experts, including John Paul.

1:32.0

But I want to start by going to the person I've always thought of as a natural advice giver.

1:37.1

She's been listening to me talk about my problems on and off for almost forever.

1:42.3

Hi, I'm Jamie Roberts and I am a high school guidance counselor outside of Boston,

1:46.1

and I have known mayor since middle school. When we were kids, Jamie was that girl you could talk to

1:51.3

if you were upset. The one you could cry to in the bathroom. The one who never made you feel bad

1:56.9

for having a feeling. She was an old soul, an unselfish listener. I think I was aware in high school,

2:03.4

and maybe early in middle school that people came to me with problems or people came to me and

2:08.5

asked for advice. It could be adults like my mom's friends would come to me. Even teachers,

...

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