Reflect back what you heard
Mirror the speaker’s feeling and content back to them so they can hear themselves accurately.
Why it works
A reflection is a hypothesis you offer back ("It sounds like you felt sidelined"), and the speaker either confirms or corrects it. That loop does two things: it proves you were actually tracking them, and it lets them refine their own understanding by hearing it externalized. Feeling accurately understood lowers defensiveness so the real issue can surface.
How to do it
- Listen for the emotion under the content, not just the facts.
- Offer it tentatively: "It sounds like…", "I’m hearing that…", and let them correct you.
- Wait for them to confirm or adjust before you say anything of your own.
Evidence
Reflective listening is a core of Rogers’ client-centered counseling tradition and is taught and studied within psychotherapy process research on empathy and the therapeutic alliance. (observational)
Most evidence is from clinical/therapeutic contexts and on empathy broadly rather than the isolated technique; reflections done as a verbal tic ("so what I’m hearing is…") can read as fake.
Common mistake
Parroting the exact words back instead of reflecting the underlying meaning, which feels robotic and signals you understood the sounds but not the person.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach lets you rehearse forming reflections from what someone actually said, catching the reflex to jump to your own take before they feel understood.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).