Your First Body Langauge
Let Your Body Do the Talking
Science documents that the early body language of
both partners is crucial to whether love will develop or
not. One of the most tireless researchers in the laboratory
of love was Dr. Timothy Perper, who spent more than two
thousand grueling hours perched on stools of singles' bars,
scrutinizing men, women, and their early courting moves.
Like researchers tracking the mating habits of
hamsters, Dr. Perper spotted the identical courtship pattern
repeatedly in his singles' bar laboratory. Night after
night, he stayed resolutely at his post, scribbling
notations, devising charts, and hypothesizing formulas as
men and women picked each other up. Then, in the finest
scientific tradition, he broke the body language pattern of
couples getting to know each other into five very specific
steps.
Dr. Perper's findings reveal that when both partners
stuck to a precise sequence of moves, the couple wound up
leaving together or making a date. However, if either
partner broke the sequence-even accidentally-the couple
drifted apart.
Many people looking for love take lessons in social
dancing hoping to meet a Potential Love Partner. They
painstakingly learn the steps to the fox trot, the waltz,
the cha-cha, and the rhumba. But they fall flat on their
faces in the most important dance of all, the one the good
doctor dubbed
the Dance of Intimacy.
What are the steps to the Dance of Intimacy? They are as
clear and as carefully choreographed as those of the
Tennessee Waltz. They are the sequential movements you
must
make if intimacy is to develop with your
PLP. Pay attention to each of the
following five subconscious body language steps because, if
you slip on any of them, your Quarry will lose interest and
wander back into the singles' jungle.
The Dance of Intimacy
Step One: Nonverbal Signal
After the two
partners are within speaking range, one or the other makes
his or her presence known (as described in the previous
chapter) by a smile, a nod, or a glance.
Step Two: Talk
One of the two then speaks.
Perhaps he or she makes a comment or asks a question. Even a
simple ''Hi!" will do, but something verbal takes place.
Step Three: Turning
Now it gets
interesting. When one partner throws out the verbal signal,
the recipient
must turn at least the head
fully toward the speaker and acknowledge the comment
receptively. If he or she does not, the Hunter seldom tries
again. However, if the partner
does
turn warmly toward the speaker, they fall into
conversation. Then a crucial pivoting takes place. Hunter
and Quarry gradually switch from just their heads turned
toward each other to their shoulders. If they like each
other, their torsos soon turn, followed by their knees.
Finally, in successful meetings, their whole bodies wind up
facing each other. This head-to-head, belly-to-belly,
knees-to-knees gradual sequence can take from minutes to
hours. With each increasing turn, intimacy increases. With
each turn away, intimacy decreases.
Step Four: Touching
Concomitant with
talking and gradually turning toward each other comes a
powerful aphrodisiac, touch. A slight brush of his hand
while he passes you a pretzel. A light touch on your jacket
as she whisks away a piece of lint. The touch is fleeting,
almost imperceptible. How you respond to his or her first
touch is a big factor in whether the interaction continues
or not. If he or she brushes your jacket and you slightly
stiffen your shoulders, your partner can subliminally
interpret this as rejection-often wrongly. But it's too
late. At this point in the progression, Dr. Perper tells us,
it becomes impossible to tell which is Hunter and which is
Quarry. Once the initial touch has been executed, well
received, and even returned, the man and woman are on their
way to becoming, at least for the duration of the evening, a
couple.
At about this point, yet another phenomenon takes place.
Eye contact takes on a different character.
As early as 1977, a researcher observed escalating eye
contact in couples as they went from more formal eye contact
to gazing. Their eyes gradually embarked on travels all over
each other's faces, hair, necks, shoulders, and torsos.
This is the
visual voyage we'll talk
about in another article.
Step Five: Synchronization
The final step
is the most fascinating to watch. As though to confirm their
newfound affection for each other, the couple begins to move
in synchronicity with each other. For example, the man and
woman may reach for their drinks at the same time and put
their glasses back on the table together. Then they progress
to subconsciously shifting weight together, swaying to the
music together, turning their heads to some outside
interruption together, and then simultaneously looking back
at each other.Dr. Perper wrote, ''Once synchronized, couples
can stay in synchronicity seemingly indefinitely until the
bar closes, until they finish dinner and drinks and must
leave, until their train reaches wherever it is going; to
put it another way, until the business of the outside world
intervenes and causes their interaction to stop."
However, if either partner tripped up on even
just one of the above five steps (for
example, not getting in synchronicity with each other),
Timothy Perper and his research associates knew they could
start humming the couple's swan song.
Recently, I had the pleasure of watching a couple who
were obviously very much in love. I was dining in a
restaurant at a table facing the bar where a young couple
was sitting. Their bodies were completely facing each other,
and they were leaning toward each other, practically falling
off their stools. They smiled and nodded as each crooned out
bits of conversation. Their hands occasionally brushed each
other's and their movements were in total synchronicity as
they lifted their glasses and returned them to the bar. They
laughed together. They frowned together. Except for the
moments when an outside noise invaded their private world,
they maintained total eye contact. Even then, they turned
their heads away and looked back toward each other in
unison. People would say they're in love. As I was paying my
bill, the waitress noticed my watching the couple. Smiling
broadly, she said, "Yeah, I've been watching them, too.
Aren't they cute?" "Yes," I agreed. "They look like they're
very much in love." "Oh, no," she said. "They just met ten
minutes ago!" I thought, both of them must have read
Perper's Principles. Or they were, as Annie Oakley in
Annie
Get Your Gun says, "jes' doin' a
what comes natch-ur-lee!"
When You Are Quarry
The Dance
of Intimacy takes two partners. Even when you are Quarry,
you must remember the steps. Sadly, many potential
relationships never get off the ground because,
accidentally, the Quarry repels the Hunter with his or her
body language.
Unlike deer or bear hunters, human Hunters and
Huntresses suffer from a malady. It's called insecurity or
shyness. When a Hunter or Huntress levels sights at you, you
must show you are willing Quarry and be a good follower in
the Dance of Intimacy.
I was once at a party with a girlfriend, Diana. An
attractive man smiled at Diana, and she looked away. She
confided to me, "That good-looking guy over there smiled at
me." "Great," I said. "Smile back." Soon after, the fellow
was standing near us. I don't know whether it was shyness or
a desire to play it cool, but instead of turning toward him
and smiling, Diana just kept on chatting with me. A few
minutes later, we saw the good-looking stranger in a warm
tête-à-tête with another woman. Diana was crushed. She said
to me, "Oh, I guess he saw me close up and decided not to
talk to me." "No, Diana," I said, wanting to shake her. "You
just didn't respond to his overtures." She missed step one
in the basic dance of lovers-turning toward him to show
receptivity. Missed opportunities like this one are
happening round the clock, round the globe. Often willing
Quarry crying to be captured becomes the one that got away.
The Word That Can Save Your Relationship
As you are chatting with your new Quarry, it begins
to dawn on you: "This person really is special. It's not
just physical attraction. This individual has relationship
potential."
Within thirty seconds, your heart starts pumping a little
faster and your throat suddenly goes dry. Could this be the
start of something big?
Instead of
mission control directing all the parts of your body to make
all the right moves, your brain suddenly begins wondering
about the impression you're making on your Quarry. Your
breath becomes short. You sense a delirious drowning
feeling. Unfortunately, that's a side effect of
PEA shooting through your brain. Watch
out! You can't be your engaging and scintillating self if
nervousness sets in and you start
thinking about your every move. There's no time now to
concentrate on Perper's Principles and try to recall if
touch
comes before
synchronicity.
Or was it turning
before touch?
At high-anxiety moments like these, you need a simple
technique to make your body do precisely what Dr. Perper
prescribes so you can pay attention to what your fabulous
new Quarry is saying. Hunters, the following is especially
important for you because men often forget that times have
changed. In the old days, a woman had to be impressed with
your muscles or your speed and know you could go out into
the jungle and trap a wild pig or a rabbit for dinner.
However, many women today can afford their own Pork Pàté or
Rabbit Chasseur at a fancy restaurant. The name of the game
is no longer impress
a woman. It's
show how impressedyou are with her.
Huntresses, most of us were weaned on boosting the
male ego. Perhaps some chemical in mother's milk told us to
kowtow to all the men in our life. By age five we had
already learned what worked: "Oh, Daddykins, you're so
wunnerful. I know you'll buy me that Barbie doll." Then
something happened: We grew up.
Some of us became feminists. Like throwing out the baby with
the bath water, many women threw out the "Oh, you're so
wunnerful" attitude along with their tattered Barbie
dolls. The modern woman feels she needs to express
her capability, her independence, her superintelligence
right away. Wrong!
There is plenty of time to show a man these qualities later,
and you must
show them if you want to have a good relationship
with mutual respect.
But now is not the time! Now is the time to make
the man feel that you think he's just absolutely, positively
"wunnerful." Both men and women are infinitely more drawn to
someone who instantly likes them.
In several
studies, men and women who didn't know each other
were told, falsely, by researchers that another participant
liked them. When later questioned whom they liked in the
group, practically every participant chose someone of the
opposite sex who supposedly "liked them." Unfortunately, you
don't have a researcher whispering in your Quarry's ear how
much you like them, so you must demonstrate that all on your
own. Since saying "I like you" sounds a tad abrupt in words,
leave it to your body to do the talking for you. While
chatting with him or her, think of this one word:
soften.
Match your body language up against the acronym which spells
soften. It's an
insurance policy against tripping in the Dance of Intimacy.
TECHNIQUE #9:
SOFTEN YOUR QUARRY'S HEART
S
is for smile.
As you are listening to your Quarry, let a soft smile of
acceptance frame your lips.
O
is for
open body. Face your Quarry
fully, nose to nose, belly to belly. Keep your arms open in
a relaxed, inviting position.
F
is for
forward
lean. Lean toward your Quarry or stand or sit just a
tad too close to show you are physically attracted.
T
is for
touch.
Gently, even "accidentally," touch your Quarry's arm or
brush a piece of lint from his or her clothing.
E
is for
eye
contact. Remember to use all four of the eye allure.
N
is for
nod.
Nod your head gently in response to whatever your Quarry is
saying.
"But This Is So Basic!"
After reading this segment, some of you may say, "But
this advice is so obvious! Why, in a sophisticated
exploration of the complexities of love, do you suggest such
mundane movements and have the temerity to call them
techniques?"
For two reasons, my friends. One, because some of my most
cosmopolitan and urbane friends still stumble over these
simplistic steps. Two, because of their supreme importance.
Research has proved that these are the specific moves that
really work when first meeting someone you want to make fall
in love with you.