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Learn the secrets your face reveals to people, whether
they consciously know what they're looking at or not...
Excellent for understanding people instantly. Not to
mention it's easy to learn.
If you're dating, conducting interviews, or not getting
along with certain people at work, here's a smart way
to become more 'psychic'.
They say they enjoy sales…is it true or should they
be in the back crunching numbers instead of dealing
1-on-1 w/people?
They say they're romantic...but it's probably not true
unless you see it in these two face features...
I started face reading because I didn't feel I had that
"women's intuition" stuff at all.
No one can pull a fast one on me anymore.
What's really neat is to be able to see if my teen is fibbing...
But most important is being able to see what people
are about, based on their face, and be empathetic
or even steer a conversation their way.
Imagine how great that is if you're on a job interview.
To know if the interviewer/interviewee cares more about
people, or the bottom line, or if they're somewhere
in between.
You can see if someone is very physical, or intuitive,
and ask them about it.
Likes to be active/moving/outdoors, is what I mean by
"physical". Possibly even high sex drive.
You can compliment how smart they are...and when
they ask how you know, tell them where you can see
it in their face.
Impressive! Find out what your eye color means, or
your bushy eyebrows, or your thick upper lip...
Is the new co-worker jealous, a creative thinker,
cautious? Is your date independent or needy? Why
is your boss so...um...bossy?
Why are there a variations in body language
across cultures?
a. Microexpressions are the minute facial
contractions that do NOT vary from culture
to culture. Body language – movements of
the head, limbs, etc. - is where you’ll see
variation. For example, Greeks nod their
heads when they wish to say “no”, where
most of the rest of the world nods to say
“yes”. But everyone has the same expression
when they are surprised, or happy, or
ashamed, though it often passes quickly.
b. Eye contact, heavy or sparse, means
the same thing everywhere – “I’m paying
attention to you” - whether it’s negative or
positive attention. Conversely, looking away –
whether out of dishonesty, inattentiveness,
or a feeling of superiority - means “I’m avoiding
you”.
c. Why one set of people uses lots of eye
contact (Arabs) while another considers it
disrespectful (Japanese) is still a question
for me to research.
How did these differences evolve? If I were
to find references in the good book of the
culture, would they give me a raison d’etre,
or merely a rough launch date?