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  • In this video, I'm going to teach you how to read anyone and specifically, what I want

  • to do is give you six things that if you implement and think about these, you're going to know

  • what people are thinking and feeling, without them even having to tell you, and that skill

  • is amazing.

  • You can apply it in tons and tons of different circumstances and that's the last piece. I want to

  • help you learn how to apply it, because a very, very common question that I see in the comments,

  • and I appreciate those, but very, very common one is, "Charlie, how do you make this charisma

  • breakdowns? How do you see the frameworks that you see and how did you learn this stuff?"

  • The answer is that I started by learning how to read people. That's so closely tied to

  • the question of the Charisma Breakdown. So, I figured, why not knock them both out in one video.

  • Let's go ahead and get started though.

  • The first thing, if you're interested in learning how to read other people, you have to get

  • better at reading yourself. You need to develop a level of self-awareness that is far, far

  • above most other people. But the good news is it's a very specific kind of self-awareness.

  • And that is, you have to notice when you are forming opinions about other people, when

  • you're changing opinions about other people. Because if you think about it, there's 7 billion

  • people in the world, and you don't have opinions on most of them, right?

  • You don't trust them or distrust them, or like them, or hate them. It's just neutral

  • to you. But at some point, between seeing someone who is a stranger, and then, having them

  • walk up to you, start a conversation, speaking for, maybe, 5 minutes, you're going to form

  • a very strong opinion in most times. And that's gonna be, "You know what? I just don't trust this

  • guy. There's something about him that tipped me off," or "This guy's awesome. I would definitely

  • hang out and spend time with him." Or, maybe, it's you know, this person, "How sharp are they.

  • I would love to work with them."

  • The truth is, only a few minutes have gone by. You haven't seen their resume. You don't

  • know anything about them. Everything they're saying could be true, false, or otherwise.

  • What you're picking up on are very, very subtle cues. And if you get good at noticing when

  • you feel these things, you're going to get better at picking up those cues and identifying

  • what they are.

  • So, Step 1: Self-awareness. You need to know when you are having opinions about other people.

  • Second piece. Now we're gonna bring the focus to others. We'll start with the easiest and

  • that is where is their attention, right? Attention is very typically easy to identify. Most of

  • us can do it intuitively, but just to cover the basic things, eye contact, right? You

  • know when someone's paying attention to you or rather they're talking to you but they

  • kind of looking over, they're looking down at their watch, right? They're trying to get out of there.

  • You can tell that and sense that intuitively. The other thing that people--some people have

  • a hard time sensing is where their body is, right? So, when you're trying to get out of

  • a conversation, you might start to angle out, "Yeah, okay. Cool. Sounds good, all right.

  • See you tomorrow," and then, you're gone, right?

  • Similarly, if you're in a room, and there's someone you'd like to be talking to over this

  • direction, but you're in a conversation with the person here, you might find yourself opening

  • up without even thinking about it. So where your hips, where your feet, where your torso,

  • people would say, the truth is this is the whole darn thing where different elements

  • of your body are facing, is indicative of where your attention is. And then, the last

  • thing for attention that is going to be important is, is the person that is talking to you or

  • that, maybe, you're talking to, are you answering and asking engaged questions? A non-engaged

  • question is "Uh-huh, uh-huh, cool. Uh, interesting. Yup, okay." That's not engaged.

  • An engaged question relates to the thing that you're saying. It's an add-on. It doesn't

  • have to be a question. It can be a comment that is related to the story you told. That

  • is gonna be very indicative of if you have someone's attention or don't. So that's the

  • first step of cold reading. Second thing, overall, is going to be, okay, are they giving

  • me attention? Are they interested or disinterested in what is going on in front of them. Then

  • we want to hone down a little bit, right? Because all we know now is interested or disinterested.

  • We need to get to some emotions. And the truth about emotions is that they are very, very

  • focused up here.

  • The easiest place to find an emotion--there are other tells elsewhere--but 80 to 90% of

  • them are occurring here, and I include the voice box in this because tonality is going

  • to be huge.

  • Specifically, the first thing you should start to do is identifying your expressions. We

  • all know, you know happiness, right? We know these things. That's not a problem. What becomes

  • difficult for people are micro expressions, right? So, when someone is feeling a feeling,

  • but they're trying to hide it. Say for instance, we just saw happiness on my face. Say that

  • I'm in a job interview and I just got a job offer that is way higher than I expected,

  • but I want to keep it on the down low. I don't want them to know. At this point, what I might

  • do is they say, "Okay, you just got XYZ amount of money." "Okay, sounds interesting." And

  • what you'll do is you'll see people lose momentary control and flash briefly and less big--right

  • now it's much teeth--the emotions that they're feeling. And this is true for tons of different

  • emotions.

  • I, personally, got my experience learning how to read this in the real world, right?

  • I wasn't necessarily looking for them, but what I would do is go out and see, "Okay,

  • what's going on with people's faces." This was unconscious at the time, and then, how

  • do they behave immediately after that?

  • If you want a crash course on that, I haven't done it myself, but I do see that there's

  • micro expression tests online. And they're fine, it will give you a start, and, maybe,

  • then, you take it into the world. So, if you're interested in those, I'm gonna link in the

  • description to that, but don't go just yet, because the truth is, micro expressions and

  • identifying them consciously is really not a huge part of how the best people who read

  • others do it. The best way that they do it is by identifying patterns.

  • So, job interview again, right? Say you're in a job interview and the person across the

  • table from you goes, "Okay, I see your resume. We'll, uh, we'll call you back." Pattern.

  • You know that. They're never gonna call you back, right? You go out into a bar, and I've

  • seen this one. There's a guy who's leering and looming over a girl, right? Pattern right

  • there. She's about to get the heck out of there. You see these very, very consistent

  • patterns, and I could list off a ton for you.

  • While there's a finite number, there is a large finite number, so it's not necessarily

  • worth it for me to do all of the patterns that will take forever. What I can do is teach

  • you to start identifying them better. And the way that you do that is by making predictions.

  • This is going to really, really hone your pattern recognition skills.

  • So, for instance, when I was about, I think I was 21 because I was just starting to go

  • to bars, spending a lot of time going out is really new and exciting. But one of the

  • things that I would do is I would go and I would make guesses, predictions about who

  • knew who, how a conversation was going, if that girl like that guy. So I'd walk in and

  • I'd go, "You know, that group, I think that they came here together because that girl

  • just grabbed the drink and handed it to that guy as if it was no big deal." So there's

  • clearly some trust there.

  • On the other hand, there's a group over here--two guys and two girls--and they're standing with

  • this like invisible line between them. Nobody's touching. The guys are on one side, the girls

  • on the other. I think they just met, and then, there's the situation with a buddy of mine,

  • I remember, and I started to get good at seeing this, and he said, "You know, there's this

  • girl. I met her and it's going really well; looked like it was going well." And then I

  • would watch as he rolled up and stood against the wall like this and leered over her, and

  • all of a sudden, pattern, she's about to bolt, and what do you know, 30 seconds later, she

  • leaves.

  • So start making predictions. That is going to help you really, really good at this pattern

  • recognition stuff, and I cannot recommend that enough. I really think, for me, that

  • was the biggest thing that enabled me to start seeing the stuff that was going on. I think

  • this is gonna happen next, and then see if I was right or wrong.

  • But the truth of all of this is you have to go out and you got to be scientific about

  • it, because your predicting pattern, you're seeing all these things, but if you don't

  • start to apply it to your own life, and to experiment with it, it's all gonna fall flat

  • and it's not gonna stick. And the interesting about experiments is that they prove you right

  • or wrong. This is the science part of it, because I remember, I would go out and I would

  • try to pick up different things and friends of mine who did other things as well.

  • So, for instance, Ben, my co-founder, who you might have seen in other videos, had this

  • buddy, who's very gregarious, outgoing, but who's also a big dude, and people really liked

  • him. So Ben, when he first got to college, when the first thing he did, he saw this guy,

  • he want to be more like him, get the reactions that he got, and he thought, "Okay, he's 220

  • pounds of muscle; must be the muscle." So he went to the gym, worked out really hard,

  • and a year later, he's put on 40 pounds. He's the same height, same size, same weight, and

  • nothing really changed, right?

  • It didn't go the direction that he wanted. Then he goes, "Okay, so it's not necessarily

  • the size, I think what it is is that he's very loud and gregarious and outgoing, and

  • so he started speaking more loudly, and being more outgoing, and all of a sudden you see,

  • okay, that is the pattern that is making it work. In my own life, there was a friend of

  • mine who I thought had great eye contact, and I thought, "You know what? He's got big

  • eyes, so it's probably because of his big eyes that he's got such great eye contact.

  • And, for the next week, on and off, when I was in conversation and I thought about it,

  • I'd go, "All right, I want to see what happens, how people respond if I'd do the "big eye"

  • eye contact.

  • So you'd be talking to me and I'd go, "Uh-hmm. Awesome. That was so cool, right?" And I'm

  • doing this bug-eyed, insane, mad person look until Ben, my friend, goes, "Dude, what the

  • hell are you doing?" And, okay, I learned that that pattern was completely wrong. The

  • point of this is you can start to learn how to cold read people. If you can identify the

  • emotions you have, you're gonna get some hypothesis about what's driving emotions. If you can

  • start to predict and see them in other people, you're gonna get good at knowing, okay, this

  • conversation is about to tip. It's gonna go well or it's gonna go bad, they're about to

  • really make friends or they're gonna split. And then, the way that I make the breakdowns

  • is I just go back and say, "What happened before that?" So I saw my buddy go out with

  • this girl who is about to split, but what did he do? I didn't know it at the time, and

  • I only put this together later that it was, "Oh, my gosh, he leans up against the wall,

  • looms over her." Of course, that triggers a feeling of "I need to get out of here."

  • So, sometimes, when I'm out, I'll notice. I go out to dinner, right? And I'd see that

  • one friend of mine will start to tell a story and we'll be in a little circular table, and

  • every single person there will pay attention. I'll go, "This is an interesting story," but,

  • honestly, what interests me more is how the heck did he do that? What did he preface it

  • with? What went right before he started talking?

  • And similarly, same night, somebody on the other side of the circular table tell a story,

  • and it will just fall flat. It will either go three sentences in, and nobody will listen.

  • So, that's how I do it. That, I think, is how you can become much, much better at not

  • only reading people, but in how to learn what these triggers are, so that you can be more

  • captivating, more interesting, more of the ways that you would like to be in your own

  • life. And, I guess, I should say this last thing.

  • A huge, huge underpinning of this channel and everything that we do is the idea that

  • you were not born charismatic or uncharismatic, confident or unconfident. All of those things

  • are an aggregate of your mindsets and actions. So, I just have to say that if you don't believe

  • that, go watch more of our videos, but that is a fundamental piece that is going to make

  • all of this possible.

  • So, that's it for this video. I hope that you've enjoyed it. If you have, and you'd

  • like to see more, please go ahead and subscribe to the channel. If you do, you're gonna get

  • our videos on your homepage. You're gonna get an email whenever I put a new one up,

  • and in that way, you will not miss anything that we do.

  • If you have comments, questions, things that you'd like to see in the channel, go ahead,

  • write them down in the comments. I know a lot of you have asked for more Game of Thrones.

  • I'm gonna keep that on, but let me know, do you want more Charisma Breakdowns, or are

  • you interested in more Q and A style like this? I'm game for whatever. These are nice

  • because I can film them quickly, but I love the Charisma Breakdowns as well. So, let me

  • know. I'll try to do a good balance.

  • I hope that you've enjoyed this video and I will see you in the next one.

In this video, I'm going to teach you how to read anyone and specifically, what I want

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A2 初級

誰でも読める方法 (How To Read ANYONE)

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    tobosu に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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