Hello again to your reader. Currently we've been
discussing things that are useful to improving one's quality of life such as
eating right, how to achieve a Zen and mindfulness mindset, how to take the
first steps in a minimalist lifestyle. Basic life skills that everyone should
have and how to achieve the qualities of the state's person, all of these
things will definitely help to improve your quality of life, if used
effectively and efficiently. One of the most important skills for leading a
high quality of life is communication is how we express our personalities.
Physical feelings such as discomfort and emotional feelings such a happiness or
sadness having good communication skills is particularly important for a state
person, and most people have the basics of communications such as language both
written and verbal pretty well figured out. However, there is an aspect of
language that people are forgetting how to read and communicate with thanks to
technological advancements like smart phones. With all their various social
media applications and things such as e-mail, people are losing face-to-face
interactions with humanity. I have actually seen (and this is the most
depressing thing ever, next to small dogs in sweaters) to people in the same
room less than 6 feet apart texting each other their entire conversation!! When
I saw this I started thinking about the fact that if this keeps up. People will
know how to communicate without an electronic device of some sort in the hands
and they will forget how to interact with each other, and understand the
subtleties of human communication. Like facial expressions and sarcasm. So I
thought in order to slow the onslaught of human communication and interaction
as well. As help understand physical and emotional importance of human
interaction, the blog today, would discuss the importance of understanding and
reading human body language....
Body language is a huge part of how we communicate
with other people. However, most of us only have an intuitive knowledge of
nonverbal communication at best. Fortunately, if reading body language doesn't
come naturally to you, or if you'd simply like to get better at it, there's a
huge body of work that details what the body is really saying.
Read Body Language Through the
Comfort/Discomfort Lens
For a lot of people, diving into the world of body
language elicits the same reaction: "At last, I'll learn how to be a human
lie detector!" It's hard to blame anyone for the impulse. However,
contrary to what Cal Lightman would like us to believe, you can't tell exactly
how a person is feeling just because their lip twitched or they crossed their
arms. What you can do is gauge how much a person is comfortable. This
comfort/discomfort spectrum is far more important than trying to identify a
specific expression or guessing a particular thought in someone's head.
Those who are lying or are guilty and must carry
the knowledge of their lies and/or crimes with them find it difficult to
achieve comfort, and their tension and distress may be readily observed.
Attempting to disguise their guilt or deception places a very distressing
cognitive load on them as they struggle to fabricate answers to what would
otherwise be simple questions (DePaulo et al., 1985, 323–370). The more
comfortable a person is when speaking with us, the easier it will be to detect
the critical nonverbal signs of discomfort associated with deception. Your goal
is to establish high comfort during the early part of any interaction or during
"rapport building." This helps you to establish a baseline of
behaviors during that period when the person, hopefully, does not feel
threatened.
While he describes this dynamic in the context of
lie-detection, it's the lens through which all body language can be
interpreted. If you're at a party and everyone's enjoying themselves, a person
in a chair, with their arms folded, and head down will stand out. They might
seem uncomfortable and you might wonder if something is out of the ordinary. In
response to this, you might ask if anything is wrong. That very same set of
actions observed in someone in a hospital waiting room would be much less
abnormal. Even if the person has nothing to worry about, hospitals can make
people uncomfortable or nervous. Asking this person what's wrong could easily
result in the very obvious reaction: "I'm in a hospital."
Observing how comfortable a person is in a
particular context can give you clues as to how they feel. If you're on a first
date and your partner seems comfortable, they're probably into you! If you're
conducting a job interview and the applicant seems comfortable and confident
during the process, but gets fidgety and nervous when you ask if they've stolen
from previous employers, it might be something to inquire about further. Body
language is not an exact science, but gauging comfort levels can give you clues
about what's really going on in the minds of people around you.
The Basic Body Cues to Watch For
Most of our body parts are quietly communicating
how we feel and what we want, whether we realize it or not. The following are
some cues you can watch for to get an idea of how a person is feeling, but keep
in mind the comfort/discomfort paradigm. No one behavior tells the whole story.
Head and Face
The first thing to understand about trying to read
facial expressions is that they are not always the most honest. We'll get to
which body part is the most honest later, but we are trained from a very young
age that certain facial expressions and actions are appropriate for certain
occasions, whether we feel them or not. However, there are still some cues you
can glean from facial expressions.
One of the easiest to learn about (though still one
of the hardest to accurately identify) is the "fake smile". As the
Paul Ekman International blog (named for the pioneer in facial expression
analysis Paul Ekman) explains, fake smiles—the kind we make because we're
supposed to—are most often done with just the mouth. We know to raise the
corners of our mouths to smile. A lot fewer of us are aware of how much our
eyes are involved in a proper smile. In a real smile, our eyebrows, eyelids,
and sometimes even our whole head turn upwards, along with the corners of our
mouths. This test from the BBC can let you try your hand at telling the real
smiles from the fake ones.
Pursed lips are another way to tell when someone is
drifting over to the discomfort side of the spectrum. This is a favorite
expression analysts like to point out whenever a politician is giving some form
of confession. In cases like Anthony Weiner and Eliot Spitzer's confession
speeches, both can be seen tightening their lips, pursing them to the point
they nearly disappear.
These are just a couple of easy to identify facial
gestures that can tell you a bit about what a person's feeling, but there are
so many different variations that the face itself has its own coding system to
gauge them all. And, as we've established, the face isn't always the most
honest part of the body, which is why it's important to give equal (or more)
attention to the rest of the body.
Arms
Our arms are heavily employed in self-expression.
Many individual gestures can be taught or trained in us over time (such as
"don't point at people"), but there are two more helpful aspects of
arm and hand motion to observe: how much space they take up, and how high they
reach.
Gravity-defying gestures, in any part of the body,
are generally seen as positive. When we're happy, excited, or interested, we
raise our heads or our chin, our arms go up, even our legs and feet start to
point skyward or bounce if we're sitting. The arms are incredibly versatile at
highlighting this behavior. As Navarro explains again:
When excited, we don't restrict our arm movements;
in fact our natural tendency is to defy gravity and raise our arms high above
our heads. When people are truly energized and happy, their arm motions defy
gravity. As previously mentioned, gravity-defying behaviors are associated with
positive feelings. When a person feels good or confident, he swings his arms
affirmatively, such as while walking. It is the insecure person who
subconsciously restrains his arms, seemingly unable to defy the weight of
gravity.
Candidly tell a colleague about a drastic and
costly mistake she just made at work and her shoulders and arms will sink down
and droop. Ever have that "sinking feeling"? It's a limbic response
to a negative event. Negative emotions bring us down physically. Not only are
these limbic responses honest, but they happen in real time. We leap and thrust
our arms in the air the moment the point is scored, or our shoulders and arms
sink when a referee rules against us. These gravity-related behaviors
communicate emotions accurately and at the precise moment we are affected.
Further, these physical manifestations can be contagious, whether at a football
stadium, a rock concert, or in a gathering of great friends.
Individual gestures of the hands may be helpful for
communicating conscious thoughts—like a coach speaking in a nonverbal code to a
player on the field—but when it comes to gauging the subconscious mood or
comfort level of a person, gravity is where it's at.
Torso
Our torso—comprised of our shoulders, chest, and
belly—is pretty vital to our survival. That's where our organs live! As such,
we're pretty well trained to protect this part of our body instinctively. Even
in regular social settings, we protect our torso. More importantly, we allow
access to our torso when we're comfortable:
These torso displays that reflect the limbic
brain's need to distance and avoid are very good indicators of true sentiments.
When one person in a relationship feels that something is wrong with the way
things are going, he or she is most likely sensing a subtle degree of physical
distancing in his or her partner. The distancing can also take the form of what
I call ventral denial. Our ventral (front) side, where our eyes, mouth, chest,
breasts, genitals, etc. are located, is very sensitive to things we like and
dislike. When things are good, we expose our ventral sides toward what we
favor, including those people who make us feel good. When things go wrong,
relationships change, or even when topics are discussed that we disfavor, we
will engage in ventral denial, by shifting or turning away. The ventral side is
the most vulnerable side of the body, so the limbic brain has an inherent need
to protect it from the things that hurt or bother us. This is the reason, for
example, we immediately and subconsciously begin to turn slightly to the side
when someone we dislike approaches us at a party. When it comes to courtship,
an increase in ventral denial is one of the best indicators that the
relationship is in trouble.
This behavior of either sharing or denying our
ventral side to people can be most readily observed in a dating or romantic
context. Early on in a relationship, a couple will frequently angle their torso
more towards their partner than away. They'll turn towards them when they enter
a room, or lean in when sitting next to each other.
Part of the reason we do this is because when we're
comfortable, our limbic system lowers its defenses. We protect or deny access
to our torso when we're around unpleasant things. Naturally, the converse is
usually true. If we're readily leaving our chests and abdomen open, even
voluntarily pointing them towards a person, it probably means we feel happy and
safe with what's going on.
Legs
If you had to guess which part of the body is the
most honest, most people would guess that it's eyes or possibly the face as a
whole. In reality, we're way off. The legs and feet, suggests Navarro, are
where the real honesty lies. After all, we're trained throughout most of our
life to, smile for the camera, stop making faces, and to pretend to have a good
time. However, millions of years of evolution have taught us that our legs need
to be ready to escape.
One key way to detect the leg's intention is to
notice where the feet and legs are pointing. Similar to the way we point our
chests, our lower extremities tend to lean or point in the direction of where
we'd like to go or what we're most interested in:
When two people talk to each other, they normally
speak toe to toe. If, however, one of the individuals turns his feet slightly
away or repeatedly moves one foot in an outward direction (in an L formation
with one foot toward you and one away from you), you can be assured he wants to
take leave or wishes he were somewhere else. This type of foot behavior is
another example of an intention cue (Givens, 2005, 60–61). The person's torso
may remain facing you out of social diligence, but the feet may more honestly
reflect the limbic brain's need or desire to escape.
On the flip side, crossed legs—particularly while
standing—are, a relatively strong indicator that a person is interested in
staying where they are. This is tied pretty deeply into our survival instinct.
While we may pretend to be having a good time, crossing the legs makes it more
difficult to escape danger. Even if we might know that there's no immediate
physical danger at a social gathering we want to leave, our brains still
respond to the discomfort in the same way: by preparing to move away from here.
The Importance of a Baseline
More than any other individual piece of body
language is the importance of establishing a baseline. Everyone has their own
quirks, habits, and idiosyncrasies. A shy person may keep their arms lower and
closer to their body and their head down more than a more outgoing person by
default (which is part of the reason why an introvert can be misinterpreted as
being upset or confrontational). Any one behavior by itself is not necessarily
indicative of a mood change. However, as you get to know a person and how they
behave in normal situations, abnormal behavior can give you a much greater
indication of how they're feeling. Don't just watch for a foot bouncing or a
head held high. Keep an eye out for when that behavior is out of the ordinary.
More importantly, though, use the cues available to
you to gauge comfort levels and be aware of what the person is reacting to.
Often, you don't need to perform a deep line of questioning to figure out
what's really on a person's mind. If they grimace when a particular song comes
on when they're otherwise happy, it's a pretty safe bet that the song was the
cause.
As always, thanks for listening. It will of course be more to come soon.
Interesting article. I do, however, take exception to the part about legs. I don't often cross my legs, even in comfortable situations. Also when standing I don't normally go toe to toe. Of course, I may be the odd one!
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