18 Ways To Improve Your Body Language
Here is just a few of many pointers on how to improve
your body language. Improving your body language can make a big
difference in your people skills, attractiveness and general
mood.
There is no specific advice on how to use your body
language. What you do might be interpreted in several ways,
depending on the setting and who you are talking to. You’ll
probably want to use your body language differently when
talking to your boss compared to when you talk to a girl/guy
you’re interested in. These are some common interpretations of
body language and often more effective ways to communicate with
your body.
First, to change your body language you must be aware
of your body language. Notice how you sit, how you stand, how
you use you hands and legs, what you do while talking to
someone.
You might want to practice in front of a mirror. Yeah,
it might seem silly but no one is watching you. This will give
you good feedback on how you look to other people and give you
an opportunity to practise a bit before going out into the
world.
Another tip is to close your eyes and visualize how
you would stand and sit to feel confident, open and relaxed or
whatever you want to communicate. See yourself move like that
version of yourself. Then try it out.
You might also want observe friends, role models,
movie stars or other people you think has good body language.
Observe what they do and you don’t. Take bits and pieces you
like from different people. Try using what you can learn from
them.
Some of these tips might seem like you are faking
something. But fake it til you make it is a useful way to learn
something new. And remember, feelings work backwards too. If
you smile a bit more you will feel happier. If you sit up
straight you will feel more energetic and in control. If you
slow down your movements you’ll feel calmer. Your feelings will
actually reinforce your new behaviours and feelings of
weirdness will dissipate.
In the beginning easy it’s to exaggerate your body
language. You might sit with your legs almost ridiculously far
apart or sit up straight in a tense pose all the time. That’s
ok. And people aren’t looking as much as you think, they are
worrying about their own problems. Just play around a bit,
practice and monitor yourself to find a comfortable
balance.
1. Don’t cross your arms or legs – You have probably
already heard you shouldn’t cross your arms as it might make
you seem defensive or guarded. This goes for your legs too.
Keep your arms and legs open.
2. Have eye contact, but don’t stare – If there are
several people you are talking to, give them all some eye
contact to create a better connection and see if they are
listening. Keeping too much eye-contact might creep people out.
Giving no eye-contact might make you seem insecure. If you are
not used to keeping eye-contact it might feel a little hard or
scary in the beginning but keep working on it and you’ll get
used to it.
3. Don’t be afraid to take up some space – Taking up
space by for example sitting or standing with your legs apart a
bit signals self-confidence and that you are comfortable in
your own skin.
4. Relax your shoulders – When you feel tense it’s
easily winds up as tension in your shoulders. They might move
up and forward a bit. Try to relax. Try to loosen up by shaking
the shoulders a bit and move them back slightly.
5. Nod when they are talking – nod once in a while to
signal that you are listening. But don’t overdo it and peck
like Woody Woodpecker.
6. Don’t slouch, sit up straight – but in a relaxed
way, not in a too tense manner.
7. Lean, but not too much – If you want to show that
you are interested in what someone is saying, lean toward the
person talking. If you want to show that you’re confident in
yourself and relaxed lean back a bit. But don’t lean in too
much or you might seem needy and desperate for some approval.
Or lean back too much or you might seem arrogant and
distant.
8. Smile and laugh – lighten up, don’t take yourself
too seriously. Relax a bit, smile and laugh when someone says
something funny. People will be a lot more inclined to listen
to you if you seem to be a positive person. But don’t be the
first to laugh at your own jokes, it makes you seem nervous and
needy. Smile when you are introduced to someone but don’t keep
a smile plastered on your face, you’ll seem
insincere.
9. Don’t touch your face – it might make you seem
nervous and can be distracting for the listeners or the people
in the conversation.
10. Keep you head up - Don’t keep your eyes on the
ground, it might make you seem insecure and a bit lost. Keep
your head up straight and your eyes towards the
horizon.
11. Slow down a bit – this goes for many things.
Walking slower not only makes you seem more calm and confident,
it will also make you feel less stressed. If someone addresses
you, don’t snap you’re neck in their direction, turn it a bit
more slowly instead.
12. Don’t fidget – try to avoid, phase out or
transform fidgety movement and nervous ticks such as shaking
your leg or tapping your fingers against the table rapidly.
You’ll seem nervous and fidgeting can be a distracting when you
try to get something across. Declutter your movements if you
are all over the place. Try to relax, slow down and focus your
movements.
13. Use your hands more confidently – instead of
fidgeting with your hands and scratching your face use them to
communicate what you are trying to say. Use your hands to
describe something or to add weight to a point you are trying
to make. But don’t use them to much or it might become
distracting. And don’t let your hands flail around, use them
with some control.
14. Lower your drink – don’t hold your drink in front
of your chest. In fact, don’t hold anything in front of your
heart as it will make you seem guarded and distant. Lower it
and hold it beside your leg instead.
15. Realise where you spine ends – many people
(including me until recently) might sit or stand with a
straight back in a good posture. However, they might think that
the spine ends where the neck begins and therefore crane the
neck forward in a Montgomery Burns-pose. Your spine ends in the
back of your head. Keep you whole spine straight and aligned
for better posture.
16. Don’t stand too close –one of the things we
learned from Seinfeld is that everybody gets weirded out by a
close-talker. Let people have their personal space, don’t
invade it.
17. Mirror -
Often when you get along with a person, when the two of
you get a good connection, you will start to mirror each
other unconsciously. That means that you mirror the other
person’s body language a bit. To make the connection
better you can try a bit of proactive mirroring. If he
leans forward, you might lean forward. If she holds her
hands on her thighs, you might do the same. But don’t
react instantly and don’t mirror every change in body
language. Then weirdness will ensue. :)
18. Keep a good attitude – last but not least, keep a
positive, open and relaxed attitude. How you feel will come
through in your body language and can make a major
difference.
You can change your body language but as all new
habits it takes a while. Especially things like keeping you
head up might take time to correct if you have spent thousands
of days looking at your feet. And if you try and change to many
things at once it might become confusing and feel
overwhelming.
Take a couple of these body language bits to work on
every day for three to four weeks. By then they should have
developed into new habits and something you’ll do without even
thinking about it. If not, keep on until it sticks. Then take
another couple of things you’d like to change and work on
them.
Check out Henrik
Edberg´s blog called Personal Development with The Positivity
Blog. It covers topics such as social skills, productivity,
wealth, health and
how you can live a happier and more positive
life.
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