Body Language Basics: How to analyze and recognize the subtle messages sent by someone's body
By Shelly Hagen
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About this ebook
Shelly Hagen
Shelly Hagen is a freelance writer and editor. She is the author of numerous wedding books for the Everything series, including The Everything Wedding Book, Third Edition. She is a graduate of Empire State College. Shelly lives in New York.
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Body Language Basics - Shelly Hagen
work that body!
CHAPTER ONE: Body language: What is it, what’s it for, how can you spot it in others, and what can you do to make it work for you? Maybe you feel like body language is kind of a silly pseudostudy. If we all use it, it’s just what humans do—so we must understand it already, right? Probably not as well as you’d think. Knowing the facts about body language gives us the skinny on what’s really going on at work, at home, or at this week’s book club meeting (are these ladies really happy, or are those constant smiles fake?), and knowing how to control our own bodies can make our communications that much more effective.
THE HISTORY BEHIND THE STUDY
Researchers in incredibly varied fields have been interested in humans’ capacity for nonverbal communication for thousands of years. In fact, rumor has it that the ancient Romans were even interested in tying the spoken word to the body’s movements.
Body language falls under the studies of:
Anthropology
Biology
Neuroscience
Evolution
Linguistics
Sociology
… and under the category this book will put it into, which is everyday, got-to-know-this-information. (No term paper due on this, but you will take a quiz or two!)
Charles Darwin, who gave us the theory of evolution, is credited with really advancing the study of body language in the late nineteenth century. After noting that humans and animals had similar means of expressing emotions through facial movements, he formed a theory: It was necessary to understand how animals expressed themselves emotionally before we could truly understand how humans express themselves, as all of this is linked by evolution. Since animals obviously let their bodies do their talking, Darwin theorized that humans followed suit.
Most researchers in this field theorize that all of us have three sets
of body language:
Natural or inborn body language, like when you turn red when you’re angry.
Learned body language, like the We’re number one
hand signal.
Signals that are a mix of the two. These vary from person to person, but crying is one example. We’re all born with the ability to cry; some of us learn to use
it for personal gain or for attention in certain situations.
Fact is, every single person gives off hundreds of nonverbal messages every day—and we respond to hundreds more. There are varying estimates as to how much of our daily communicating is accomplished through body language (some range as high as 90 percent), with most estimated percentages settling right around the 75
percent mark.
What?!
you ask. How can I be sending signals that I’m not intending to send?
Very easily. Read on.
COMMUNICATION AT ODDS
Often, we know exactly which signals we’re sending. We’re angry with someone, we confront them with our hands on our hips, eyebrows down, and a low, assertive tone of voice. This follows Darwin’s theory, by the way, that everything about us—including our body language—has evolved from the animal kingdom. While animals don’t strike a stance with paws on hips, they will attempt to make themselves seem larger in a confrontation (which is what the hands-on-hips stance is all about), and they will adapt their facial expressions and voice
patterns to aggression. Watch an animal get angry sometime (and keep out of his way). You’ll note that humans use some of the same tools to express themselves in times of conflict.
Talk, Talk, Talk
Of course, humans also have the gift of language, which only complicates matters. You see a dog getting angry, and you know what he’s thinking. He’s not pretending to be angry in order to manipulate a situation. With a human … you can’t always be so sure. Anger, happiness, sadness—any emotion can be faked through body language. Moreover, we sometimes unintentionally say one thing while our bodies act as a billboard for a completely different message.
What happens when humans’ words start contradicting their body language? We tend to believe the body language in these cases. Imagine this: You’re having a romantic dinner with a charming man, and he’s telling you how interesting you are. He just can’t get over your beauty, your intelligence, and your incredible sense of humor. And yet … as he’s talking, he’s looking over your shoulder, he’s watching the waiters walk past your table, and he’s fiddling with his silverware.
Later, you’re wondering what the heck that was all about. He told you all the right things, and yet … you were left feeling that something isn’t quite right. It’s because his body language was telling you a completely different story, which happened to send you the exact opposite message: He’s not interested. (We’ll get into the specifics of the signals he’s sending off here, and we’ll cover more romantic crises in Chapter Nine.)
The man in question is obviously unaware of the contradiction between his spoken message and his movements. After all, he’s indicating through his body language that the words coming out of his mouth are untrue. (Why he’s contradicting himself, we may never know, but if he were aware of the signals he’s putting out, you can be sure he’d change either his verbal message or his nonverbal one.) If you can learn to read body language, you can walk away from a situation like this with a fairly good idea of where you stand with someone, no matter what you’ve been told. (More on personal relationships in the next section.)
The Art of Body Language
After reading this situation, you may be thinking, Ah-ha! Now I can deconstruct all of those quirky personality types I’m dealing with!
Maybe with a little learning and a lot of practice you can, but it’s not always as easy as knowing which signals are sending which messages. There’s a bit more involved in reading others’ nonverbal communication.
Although Darwin’s theory tells us that we’re born giving off certain signals, these signals aren’t always involuntary. In other words, even though body language is an innate trait, it can also be learned—and manipulated. This can be a good thing, as in the case of acing a job interview by using your posture effectively, or it can be a bad thing, if a used car salesman convinces you with his eyes that the hunk of junk on the showroom floor is actually
primo transportation.
Body language is also specific from person to person. As in the case of the seemingly disinterested date, his body language might be telling you that he’s just a highly distractible person. It’s not really fair to judge a person in this situation based on one interaction. What’s more important in personal relationships is to look for patterns of behavior and disruptions in those patterns (some mothers can tell, for example, when their kids are lying to them simply based on the child’s body language—the stance, the eye movements, the telling shoulder shrug, all of which differ from the kid’s normal behavior).
Learning the Ropes
So why should we learn to read body language? We can really only use it when we’re face-to-face with someone, which means that when we’re thinking someone on the phone is lying to us, we’ll still be in the dark. Well, there’s lesson number one: It’s easier for someone to lie to you over the phone, precisely because it’s easier to tell a whopper when you’re not worried about your body language giving you away. If you know, for example, that you tend to purse your lips when you’re being less than honest, and you’re telling an untruth face-to-face, you may try to control this movement—which may exacerbate the situation and, in turn, your body language, giving yourself away all the more. Tell the same lie on the phone, your tone of voice may well conceal your true intentions, and your lips can tighten up as much as they want—they’ll tell no tales other than the ones you intend to tell. Literally hiding our body language is a great relief in certain situations—but knowing which movements give our true message away is important, in any case.
Consider how learning about body language could help you in this situation: At the office holiday party, you spot the coworker you’ve been dreaming about for months. She’s coming your way, and you’re getting sweaty. You want her to know that you find her attractive. She stops to speak to you, and you’re suddenly rocking back and forth on your feet, jingling the change in your pocket, and looking down at her feet. She walks away, unsure if you’re having a seizure and wondering if she should call a paramedic. You think you’ve blown it for sure. Your body language told this woman that you’re extremely nervous in her
presence—and what she does with that information now is out of your hands. (Will she steer clear of you, or will she read your signals correctly and find your nervousness endearing? Either way, your intended message—that you like her and that you’d like to know her better—got lost during your little jingling dance.)
How could this have gone differently? If you can learn to control—manipulate—certain aspects of your body language that you find undesirable or that are simply not working for you in specific situations, you’ll walk away from similar interactions feeling as though you sent the right message (instead of a quirky one).
Wow. Pretty confusing stuff. Must be time for a test.
DECODING THE MESSAGES
Before you get into the rest of this book, test what you already