Yesmaal

While there's no concrete evidence to support a specific definition, some have speculated that Yesmaal could be related to:

At its heart, Yesmaal rejects the adversarial model of conversation that dominates modern discourse. Too often, we listen through a filter of rebuttal: scanning for logical flaws, preparing our counterpoint, or waiting for a pause to seize the floor. This is what the philosopher Martin Buber would call an “I-It” relationship, where the other person is reduced to an object of analysis. Yesmaal, by contrast, enacts an “I-Thou” encounter. When we practice Yesmaal, we first say “yes” to the speaker’s right to their perspective, not necessarily to the factual accuracy of every claim. We accept the maal —the essential substance, the emotional truth, the core concern—before we ever engage in critique. This initial affirmation disarms defensiveness and creates psychological safety, the bedrock of genuine understanding. yesmaal