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That's Not What I Meant!

That's Not What I Meant!

List Price: $6.99
Your Price: $5.98
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Tannen proving her point my missing the point
Review: Deborah Tannen sure takes care of emphasizing her Ph.D degree in linguistics on the cover of every book she writes. And she has every reason to do that, since "That's Not What I Meant" is a book very influential and full of revelations about... talking.

Through many (very many) examples of everyday talk, Tannen... oops, sorry, Dr. Tannen ;-) explains how something very small we said can turn a whole conversation upside down, bringing the opposite result of what we expected. Be it between friends, lovers, or even diplomatic ambassadors, she shows how the way we talk - anything from the tone we say a word to a single finger's gesture - can change completely the meaning of our talk, and gives advice and suggestions on how to talk better and have more successful communication with everyone around us.

What I didn't particularly like about this book, is that Tannen is providing far more extensive examples of talk than she is providing explanations and solutions. She does explain things, and at the end, I did understand a lot of things I never really noticed about talking, but I certainly became a bit overwhelmed by the vast number of examples, and many times I couldn't focus on the main point.

However, this still is a pleasant book, that is easily and casually read at any time of the day. Given its low price and the practicality of its conclusions, I'd recommend it to anyone.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Tannen's "Femme-Speak": A Very Hard Sell...
Review: Dr. Deborah Tannen's book, "That's Not What I Meant," is another execise in her customized brand of Feminism: highly gullibe, overly-simplistic,and ultimately unconvincing. Even her book title's are segways to her despondent and indifferent ideals of how men and women really speak.

Dr. Tannen, a Georgetown University professor, has written yet another over-hyped social commentator book attempting to make sense of linguistics between men and women. Her tired attempts to provoke men into speaking like women. Continously, she propells the notion that men are liguistically-challenged because they don't follow her prescribed patterns of femme-speak.

Ultimately, the book bottoms-out by the second chapter. everything else seems a sad reguritation of her previous books. If anything readers have learned about Deborah Tannen is her benign feminism and inability to understand men.

Dr. Tannen should resort to her given occupation rather than marketing herself as an author. Given her title of Doctor, she is already spreading herself way too thin.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A classic book about communication says it all!
Review: Heard the taped version of THAT'S NOT WHAT I MEANT by Deborah Tannen . . . it'd an old book that's considered a classic because of what it has to say about communication . . . I think its subtitle says it all, "How Conversational Style Makes or Breaks Your Relations with Others."

I had not thought too much about this point until I heard the many examples that Tannen uses . . . whether in a relationship or going for a job, what we say--and don't say--can make or break things for us.

One quote especially caught my attention:
It's no good at all telling people what you want if what you want is for them to know without you telling them."


Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The perfect wedding gift
Review: More than one newlywed couple I've talked to describes the first year as a difficult and challenging time, and the insights that this book gives can make the difference between being able to work through the issues and just running in place.

I read this book just after our honeymoon, and it was a revelation. Although both my wife and I had a wonderful relationship before we got married, we found ourselves having problems that neither of us understood after we wed. As I read this book I quickly saw that there were issues discussed that paralleled what we were going through. I loaned it to my wife, and now three years later we make it a point to add a copy to any wedding gift we give.

Once you read this book, you may see the communication in your own relationships with a clearer eye. Of course, that assumes that you actually understand the text, instead of (as two reviewers here do) simply skim it for evidence of some preconceived political agenda. People who see Feminist conspiracies around every corner will completely miss the point of this book, which is too bad. I suspect such folks don't have much luck understanding the women in their lives either.

A good example of the misreading that the Feminist-hunter did is in the claim that "she propells the notion that men are liguistically-challenged because they don't follow her prescribed patterns of femme-speak." Yet the whole point of Dr. Tannen's book is this: While indirect communication (more common among women) is as valid as more direct styles (more common among men), it is the way someone who speaks in one style perceives the messages from a person who uses another that causes problems. What really made the book enlightening to me was the exploration of how context and meta-messages change that cross-style dynamic, and it helped me understand how my words could be misunderstood, how I might be misunderstanding the words of others, and why the exact same actions after the wedding could have totally different results than they did a week earlier.

My only negative comment about the book is that Dr. Tannen not only doesn't give any advice on bridging the gaps in style, she even states at one point that such efforts are futile. People who use an indirect style, for example, will be offended by a direct discussion of communication styles, because they'll try to figure out "what you're REALLY trying to say". In fact, once both my wife and I had read and discussed the book, we learned to clear up (if not always prevent) this kind of problem, and it made a huge difference in our marriage. A little less pessimism and a bit more guidance would have made the book even better.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Are We All Freaking About Misunderstanding Each Other?
Review: Tannen addressed problems in interpersonal communication, which is caused by metamessages, cultural difference, disparate conversational styles and choices, and misunderstood intentions (especially between men and women). With no doubt this is quality and eye-opening information to know and to keep in mind. Yet Tannen's account also provokes widespread fear that people will no longer communicate with one another at the risk of hurting or misunderstanding others.

I believe that we should all keep in mind cultural, gender, and ever age differences in using metamessages and communicating through body languages and facial expressions. People might choose to speak indrectly to avoid confrontation or be polite. Yet I don't agree with the fact that "the more contact people have with each other, the more opportunities both have to do things in their own way and be misunderstood." In a way, Tannen is giving people (especially couples with problematic marriages), an excuse not to talk things out and express what's in mind and on their hearts.

Conversations, if abiding all the rules and guidelines according to Tannen, will become manipulative. Everything becomes taboo in the household and people will only feel more isolated. People misunderstand others (in many occasions), because of unspoken bitterness, frustration, and shameful thoughts that don't want to be confronted. They let out frustrated emotions and blow out no small thing like "Where do you want to go dinner?" or some silly little argument that later on becomes fights. People will NOT be able to speak from the heart until they make a decision to be vulnerable and open. Think about why people feel frustrated - because they cannot be completely open about their lives. They are afraid to be confronted, challenged, and even asked how they are doing.

Misunderstanding might play a little part, but you cannot solve relationship problem solely by casting the misunderstanding. Deal with deceit and fear in heart.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A blueberry muffin with all the blueberrys and no muffin
Review: The basic information in this book is invaluable, but the Author's style resembles that of high school student. The book is written in a classic outline style (I'm going to talk about this now), it's impersonal and has cold examples. Dr. Tannen doesn't seem to give much if any of her own realizations, instead she consistantly refers to other experts. I constantly felt as though I was reading a report written for a social psychology class.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Generally good advice
Review: This book addresses a problem that is common in troubled relationships and offers some very good advice on how to deal with it. The only drawback that I really see is that the book addresses only that one problem in relative isolation, and troubled relationships often suffer from other problems as well. But, so long as you keep its somewhat narrow focus in perspective, and don't fall into the easy trap of believing that solving this one problem will make everything all right, it is a marvelous tool for improving communications in relationships.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The focus of this book is right where it should be!
Review: This book does indeed have a narrow focus, but the subject of that focus--interpersonal communication--has far reaching implications in any type of human relationship. As was correctly stated by a previous reviewer, relationships often suffer from a variety of different problems, ranging from differences in personal habits, to differences in values, to differences in religious views, but that is more or less a given in any relationship, especially one in which people share a domicile. However, it is how those relationship partners choose to "deal" with their inevitable differences "communicatively" that will determine the ultimate success or failure of their relationship. Do they choose to disagree or argue endlessly? Do they insult each other, or call each other names? Do they try to talk over each other,or become violent? Or do they approach each other in cooperative manner, open to each other's different ideas and viewpoints, with a willingness to learn from each other?

What Tannen does in this book is show how some of the common communication differences between men and women in relationships have their basis in fundamental differences in the way men and women perceive each other, and relationships in general. And furthermore, that these fundamental differences, often hidden below the surface, can have profound, and often negative, effects on all kinds of relationships throughout a person's life, unless they are brought into the light of day. In effect, what Tannen is trying to do is to get people to be more aware of how they "habitually" communicate, the possible reasons why they communicate in those ways, and how the things they say and do may affect others. In effect, her goal is to empower people to begin--perhaps for the first time in their lives--to really "choose" how they communicate in relationships--rather than being a slave to destructive habits relied on since childhood. I strongly recommend this book for both men and women in ongoing close relationships. Once you have read it, you will never see communication in your relationships in quite the same way.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The focus of this book is right where it should be!
Review: This book does indeed have a narrow focus, but the subject of that focus--interpersonal communication--has far reaching implications in any type of human relationship. As was correctly stated by a previous reviewer, relationships often suffer from a variety of different problems, ranging from differences in personal habits, to differences in values, to differences in religious views, but that is more or less a given in any relationship, especially one in which people share a domicile. However, it is how those relationship partners choose to "deal" with their inevitable differences "communicatively" that will determine the ultimate success or failure of their relationship. Do they choose to disagree or argue endlessly? Do they insult each other, or call each other names? Do they try to talk over each other,or become violent? Or do they approach each other in cooperative manner, open to each other's different ideas and viewpoints, with a willingness to learn from each other?

What Tannen does in this book is show how some of the common communication differences between men and women in relationships have their basis in fundamental differences in the way men and women perceive each other, and relationships in general. And furthermore, that these fundamental differences, often hidden below the surface, can have profound, and often negative, effects on all kinds of relationships throughout a person's life, unless they are brought into the light of day. In effect, what Tannen is trying to do is to get people to be more aware of how they "habitually" communicate, the possible reasons why they communicate in those ways, and how the things they say and do may affect others. In effect, her goal is to empower people to begin--perhaps for the first time in their lives--to really "choose" how they communicate in relationships--rather than being a slave to destructive habits relied on since childhood. I strongly recommend this book for both men and women in ongoing close relationships. Once you have read it, you will never see communication in your relationships in quite the same way.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: How to listen
Review: This is my favorite of Tannen's books. It makes some simple but important points about why people have trouble communicating. They talk differently.
My favorite comment was about people having different tolerances for pauses after the other person stops talking. For some people it is 10 seconds. For others it was nano-seconds. I wanted to encourage a quiet friend to talk. I found that by counting silently to ten after I finished talking before starting again, made him realize there was a gap to be filled there. An easy trick but I learned a lot from him and Tannen.
This is the book to give to friends and relatives, rather than her others that beat the differences between men and women into the ground. Simple but with a sweet and useful message.


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