Sunday, December 5, 2010

How To Tell Lies Successfully

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The  difficulty  with  lying  is  that  the  subconscious  mind  acts  automatically  and independently  of  our  verbal  lie,  so  our  body  language  gives  us  away.  This  is  why people who rarely tell lies are easily caught, regardless of how convincing they may sound. The moment they begin to lie, the body sends out contradictory signals, and these  give  us  our  feeling  that  they  are  not  telling  the  truth.  During  the  lie,  the subconscious  mind  sends  out  nervous  energy  that  appears  as  a  gesture  that  can contradict  what  the  person  said.  Some  people  whose  jobs  involve  lying,  such  as politicians, lawyers, actors and television announcers, have refined their body gestures to the point where it is difficult to ‘see’ the lie, and people fall for it, hook, line and sinker.


They refine their gestures in one of two ways. First, they practise what ‘feel’ like the right gestures when they tell the lie, but this is only successful when they have practised telling  numerous  lies  over  long  periods  of  time.  Second,  they  can  eliminate  most gestures so that they do’ not use any positive or negative gestures while lying, but this is also very difficult to do.


Try  this  simple  test  when  an  occasion  presents  itself.  Tell  a  deliberate  lie  to  an acquaintance and make a conscious effort to suppress all body gestures while your body is in full view of the other person. Even when your major body gestures are consciously suppressed,  numerous  microgestures  will  still  be  transmitted.  These  include  facial muscular twitching, expansion and contraction of pupils, sweating at the brow, flushing of the cheeks, increased rate of eye blinking and numerous other minute gestures that signal deceit. Research using slow motion cameras shows that these microgestures can occur within a split second and it is only people such as professional interviewers, sales people  and  those  whom  we  call  perceptive  who  can  consciously  see  them  during  a conversation or negotiation. [Paid Recommendations^^: Using photo recovery to recover your lost photos.] The best interviewers and sales people are those who have developed  the  unconscious  ability  to  read  the  microgestures  during  face-to-face encounters.


It  is  obvious,  then,  that  to  be  able  to  lie  successfully,  you  must  have  your  body hidden or out of sight. This is why police interrogation involves placing the suspect on a  chair  in  the  open  or  placing  him  under  lights  with  his  body  in  full  view  of  the interrogators;  his  lies  are  much  easier  to  see  under  those  circumstances.  Naturally, telling lies is easier if you are sitting behind a desk where your body is partially hidden, or while peering over a fence or behind a closed door. The best way to lie is over the telephone!

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Another article:Phat gramma

Post reproduced from:http://bodylanguageknol.wordpress.com/2010/12/06/how-to-tell-lies-successfully/

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