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From a clean language point of view, lull (e.g. in the rain) is the most important time to verbalize what has not been verbalized. - My own notes on listening to other people’s ideas New insights come from lull (e.g., in the rain); it is important to answer questions that cannot be answered immediately - Chatbots are stationery Answers given after careful thought are interesting. Answers given quickly are not interesting.

Eugene Gendlin. . . in the 1960s, Gendlin and his colleagues were studying “where the difference comes from, where some people get counseling that works and some that doesn’t work so well.” They were studying the After analyzing hundreds of tapes of counseling sessions, I made a wonderful discovery… One of the factors that determined the effectiveness of the counseling sessions was a particular characteristic of the client (counselor). The factor that determined the effectiveness of counseling was a particular characteristic of the client: whether or not the client had a unique way of speaking that made him or her stutter. They were stammering and searching their own hearts.

Some people see a good stagnation as a positive and others see it as a negative.

  • Positive thinkers: experience and expect interesting insights to emerge after a good stumble
  • Negative: People who recognize a person who speaks without slowness as a great person.

relevance - Parable of the Gears

orthographical variants - faltering in one’s speech - faltering - hesitation


This page is auto-translated from /nishio/いいよどみ using DeepL. If you looks something interesting but the auto-translated English is not good enough to understand it, feel free to let me know at @nishio_en. I’m very happy to spread my thought to non-Japanese readers.