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Prince William & Kate Middleton’s Christmas 2019 Body Language Is Confusing according to Patti Wood Body Language Expert
Patti Wood, Body Language Expert, noticed a few unusual signs that William and Kate weren’t totally in sync. “I usually see them very proper,” she explains, noting that they tend to convey an air of “warmth and balance.” But here, that wasn’t exactly the case, and the photos convey that they might have been at odds with each other.
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Patti Wood, MA - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at www.PattiWood.net. Check out Patti's website for her new book "SNAP, Making the Most of First Impressions, Body Language and Charisma" at www.snapfirstimpressions.com.
Body Language When You're Holding Hands by Body Language Expert Patti Wood
Your body language when you’re holding hands with your partner can provide all kinds of clues about the dynamics of your relationship and your romantic connection, says Patti Wood, body language expert and author of Snap: Making the Most of First Impressions, Body Language, and Charisma. "It’s one of my favorite couple behaviors to interpret because it shows not only the connection and confidence in the connection between the members of the couple, but also, potentially, the power dynamics and passion and tenderness," says Wood about hand-holding.
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Patti Wood, MA - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at www.PattiWood.net. Check out Patti's website for her new book "SNAP, Making the Most of First Impressions, Body Language and Charisma" at www.snapfirstimpressions.com.
Pitt and Aniston's Body Language at the SAG Awards by Body Language Expert Patti Wood
These two have major chemistry!
Body language expert Patti Wood says we're not wrong to jump to that conclusion. According to the author of Snap: Making the Most of First Impressions, Body Language, and Charisma, Pitt and Aniston are making a "deep connection" in the photo. Wood points to Pitt's right hand, which clutches the statue. "His award is in his hand, but he holds it low, below his waist. What’s important to him is her," Wood says. Pitt's left hand, which grasps Aniston's right arm, bolsters that message. According to Wood, that's a grip that says, "Stay here with me."
Oprah Magazine ArticlePatti Wood, MA - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at www.PattiWood.net. Check out Patti's website for her new book "SNAP, Making the Most of First Impressions, Body Language and Charisma" at www.snapfirstimpressions.com.
How to o Solve Changing the Temperature on the Thermostat Arguments.
The
E.R.A.S.E.R. Method
How to Solve Changing the Temperature on the Thermostat arguments.
by
Patti A. Wood
The
E.R.A.S.E.R. Method
by
Patti A. Wood
Are
you upset, irritated or angry with your partner or roommate because you can’t
agree on the thermostat settings? Are you frustrated because you have the same
argument over and over again? The ERASER Method is a step-by-step process to create
a script of your message and word it in such a way as to make it easy to give
and easy to hear! You can avoid misunderstanding and lessen defensiveness in
the receiver of your message. It prepares you for positive discussion and makes
it possible to ERASE the Thermostat problem.
STEP E Be Exact:
Describe the offensive behavior on paper, then answer the ``W'' questions noted
above regarding the behavior.
Exact Express your concerns in exact terms. Don't use generalizations
like, ``Every time you...'' or ``You never think of me...'' or ``You
always...'' Also, don't guess at or express an opinion as to why they do what
they do. For example, ``You don’t care about how cold I am or you would...''
Example, “In the last three weeks you have turned down the
thermostat to less than 59 degrees all most every night before we go to bed.”
Example, “In the last week we have argued about the
thermostat five times.”
STEP R state
the result Know the result. As
yourself, ``What is the concrete result of the offending behavior
Result After you've described the behavior,
the person may still not understand why they should change their behavior. You
may need to give them a result, i.e.,
tell them what happens as a result of the behavior.
Examples:
``When you do that,
I am so cold that no matter what I wear to bed I am too cold to sleep”
``In the arguments
we both raise are voices and say things we regret later.
STEP A
Aware There are times when it's obvious from the
steam escaping from your ears that the person's behavior is upsetting to you.
Sometimes it is not so obvious, especially to the offending person. Clue them
in. Notice what emotion their behavior arouses in you and communicate it to
them.
Example:
“I know that saving money is important to you and I
know we need to keep to a budget, and I also know that when I am that cold,
that miserable and don’t sleep it affects every part of my life, my work, my
time with you and the kids, and I worry that you don’t see how miserable I am and
it makes me feel you don’t care about me.
Example:
The
arguments affect our ability to have quality time with the kids, I think you
notice how upset they get and we both agree that arguing so much is a bad
example for the kids.
Notice these statements
are worded carefully. Absent are statements like, ``You made me angry.'' By
using an ``I'' statement, you avoid arguments. No one can argue with an ``I''
statement. It's pretty difficult for someone to tell you how you do or don't feel
about something. Your feelings are your feelings. There are times when this
step is very significant.
Granted, there are partners
who only need to know what really aggravates you to be motivated to continue
the behavior!
STEP S Switch the behavior. Suggest and recommend
the behavior you would like to see occurring in place of the current offensive
behavior.
Switch Examples:
``Can we sit down
with the electric bill and our budget Saturday afternoon when we both have some
energy and come up with a compromise that works for us?
“I have looked at our
bill and our budget, here they are. What if we choose to each give up two
things from our personal expenses that add up to the 20 dollars a month increase
in the bill and set the thermostat at 68 at night for two months and see if
that works/
STEP E Evidence—establish
and agree on the behavior change.
Evidence If you're concerned that the person may
backslide into old behaviors, you can ask for an agreement as to what the change will look like. Perhaps you can set a time frame when you both will be
observing the changed behavior, or a specific number of times you would like to
see the behavior.
Examples: Lets plan on checking in on this date
with each other, I will fix your favorite that beef stew for dinner and we can
see if we both.
This example includes a reward step see below.
Reward Some people are motivated by rewards; some
are persuaded through the prospect of punishment. Think about what motivates
the person you are talking to. Would it be helpful to give them a specific reward if they erase the old behavior
and switch to a new one? What punishment could you present as a possibility if
they don't? Caution—make sure it's something you absolutely, positively will
do. If you won't carry through on this step, it's powerless. They must know you
mean business.
Patti Wood, MA - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at www.PattiWood.net. Check out Patti's website for her new book "SNAP, Making the Most of First Impressions, Body Language and Charisma" at www.snapfirstimpressions.com.
Signs of a toxic workplace, Narcissism in the Workplace. How do Narcissists effect corporate culture and their employees. Patti Wood Body Language Expert
Here are my rough notes from a
media interview on Signs of a toxic workplace
Confusion, miscommunication,
silence stressed and defeated body language, people talking behind others
backs, rumors, cliques and us against them mentality.
Toxicity creates Confusion, not knowing what truth or
fiction is, real or imagined can destabilize you a make employees more
susceptible to future deceit and abuse. Toxic cultures/leaders love to
confuse you with mixed messages. It destabilizes you and makes you a great
target for their abuse. People don’t know who or what to believe
they are in a state of cognitive dissonance.
For example, an abuser showers someone with compliments
at work, gives them great projects and or jobs with perks and alternates that
with yelling and criticism, threats of firing, or other behaviors such as
cutting them out of email or project. Then returns with good behaviors such as statements
like, “But you’re a great guy and I
would never fire you.”
The culture itself may alternate bad with the good. They may heap
them with praise and special attention that makes them feel special or create a
culture of high rewards, money, great perks, prestige, health insurance then
switch with no rhyme or reason to coldness, abuse, overworking and unreasonable
expectations and or attacks or threat to withdraw job perks or job altogether
later.
That mixture is dangerous. The employee doesn’t know what is
real or true. I know people that worked for and or with Harvey Weinstein
for example who is highly charismatic and he was known in this work culture to
give his full charismatic focus and attention that made people feel special,
praise give perks and promise amazing success to his employees and his business
associates but yell and scream and abuse and threated to fire a get rid of
people.
This is dangerous in the workplace because the employee may
let the abuse escalate hoping for the “goodies” and to feel good and safe and
be stressed out by the abuse and therefore weakened to disagree defend or stop
the abuse. And they may spend an inordinate amount of time trying to please and
or keep the toxic person for getting upset or to try to keep the toxic business
rolling along, without rocking the boat just to keep their jobs. It is just
like an abused wife staying with her abuser. They are hanging on, but not
functioning in a healthy way that is good for them or others.
There are also “Sunk Cost” factors and what they have
already invested and cannot be recovered in their job creates an aversion to losing
more by changing the toxic environment in any way. They may do the least work
with the least effort, but they will stay. So again, you have fearful
unmotivated employees.
If a business culture is toxic people don’t feel safe, to
tell the truth, there is too much risk. They can’t say what is wrong and often
because of the stress they don’t have the energy or confidence to do so.
In group narcissism,
we see an unquestioning loyalty and admiration for the group and an intense
fervor in the persecution of any person who questions the authority of the
overarching ideals of the group. It's us against everyone else who we view as
other and less than. Cliques form, creating outsiders who feel left out and
abandoned and powerless.
The
group will do anything to ignore any bad behavior of their fellow narcissists,
give him a pass and then another pass, normalize unhealthy behaviors bullying,
abusive and dangerous behavior. They will defend one of their own kind, for
fear of losing the group. They will even attack any innocent person or persons
who threaten the group status quo. The group is their breath, their life, their
sustenance, their "supply." In the presence of other narcissists, who
reflect back “like” behaviors they don't see their dark selves. In the group,
they are whole and belong. They may see damage in others, yet it only serves to
make them feel superior. And in fact, their very acceptance of the dark damage
in their fellow tribe members may make them think they are good people! They
don’t consider the fact that in a healthy group dark damage behavior is called
out as unacceptable.
Fromm explains, “[an] individual narcissist, who is out on his own, comparing himself to normal people may see he lacks a moral core unless he is mentally very sick, he may have at least some doubts about his image. But, if he joins a group that has other narcissists, he has none, since his narcissism is shared by the majority” (ibid., p.204). They feed each other giving each other narcissistic supply
Fromm explains, “[an] individual narcissist, who is out on his own, comparing himself to normal people may see he lacks a moral core unless he is mentally very sick, he may have at least some doubts about his image. But, if he joins a group that has other narcissists, he has none, since his narcissism is shared by the majority” (ibid., p.204). They feed each other giving each other narcissistic supply
For your information
Definition of Essentially, cognitive dissonance occurs
when humans experience a state of holding two or more contradictory thoughts or
beliefs in their cognition at one time. The result is a state of anxious
confusion and a desire to reduce the resultant overwhelm and unbalanced
perception.
Patti Wood, MA - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at www.PattiWood.net. Check out Patti's website for her new book "SNAP, Making the Most of First Impressions, Body Language and Charisma" at www.snapfirstimpressions.com.
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