Broadcast Media - Ballwin, Missouri, United States
Do you think we can improve human relations, communication, and efficiency by simply asking more questions and making less statements? Do you think the old adage "It's not what you say, but how you say it" is true?In my experience, we can. Care for me to explain?This is my own personal social experiment to see if we can tackle the problems of polarization, miscommunication, and disinformation by simple linguistic structural change. I'm the test subject, you're the control group. Should we call it a dissertation?I will be sharing my deranged life experiences, asking the general public questions about controversial topics, and pushing The Question Theory to its limits. As a complex society that's only getting more complex, we must be able to discuss all issues (even the most uncomfortable) to remain stable and grow. "If you don't say what you think, you kill your unborn self." - Dr. Jordan Peterson. So if "its not what you say, but how you say it" then it seems that we need a method of saying what we think.This all began as a personal exercise based on observations of both successes and failures in the past. I found that when I communicated in question format; there was more success in both physical and emotional reality. I decided that I would try to frame my interactions this way from here on out. I want to be a better person, don't all people?I believe this method of communication can produce big results. So I'm out to prove that it's not what you say, it's how you say it. What do you think?