The book’s greatest strength is reframing the problem. Instead of blaming the “closed” person, Pritchard asks: What’s shutting them down? She identifies four common ear-closers: fear of shame, cognitive overload, past betrayal, and perceived power imbalance. For each, she offers specific “keys”—not tricks, but genuine relational shifts.
For example, the “Safety First” protocol (Chapter 3) teaches you to lower defensiveness by validating before you correct. Her sample scripts (“I hear you saying you feel micromanaged. That’s useful for me to know—thank you. Can I share my worry behind the check-ins?”) feel real, not robotic.
The chapter on “Strategic Silence” is a gem: waiting 8–10 seconds after a closed response actually prompts the other person to fill the gap, often with their real objection. I’ve used this in team meetings—awkward at first, but startlingly effective. how to open closed ears
We’ve all been there: you’re trying to have an important conversation—feedback for an employee, a heart-to-heart with a partner, or a safety warning to a teenager—and their ears might as well be sealed with concrete. How to Open Closed Ears (author: Dr. Lena Pritchard) promises a compassionate, research-backed roadmap for exactly that scenario. Does it deliver? Mostly, yes.
⭐ 4.5/5 – Essential for managers, parents, and anyone tired of talking to a wall The book’s greatest strength is reframing the problem
Also, the exercises are introspective (journaling your own defensive triggers), which is valuable—but I wanted more paired role-play scripts for practicing with a friend.
The title is slightly misleading. You don’t force ears open; you create conditions where the other person chooses to listen. Pritchard admits this, but the book could use more on what to do when someone refuses to engage despite your best efforts. The advice for high-conflict or narcissistic interactions is thin (“set a boundary and disengage”), which feels like a cop-out. For each, she offers specific “keys”—not tricks, but
Crucial Conversations , Nonviolent Communication , or The Art of Active Listening .