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7 Body Language Secrets That Reveal True Intentions

The Unspoken Language

Research suggests that up to 93% of communication is nonverbal. While this exact figure is debated, there’s no question that body language reveals truths that words often conceal.

Understanding these signals is a modern form of the ancient art of reading people.

Step 1: The Feet Never Lie

Most people focus on controlling their facial expressions and hand gestures, but feet are the most honest part of the body:

  • Feet pointing toward you — genuine interest and engagement
  • Feet pointing away — desire to leave or disengagement
  • Bouncing or tapping feet — excitement or impatience
  • Crossed ankles — holding back feelings or information
  • Feet wrapped around chair legs — insecurity or anxiety

Step 2: Micro-Expressions

Micro-expressions last only 1/25th of a second but reveal true emotions:

  • Flash of eyebrow raise — recognition or surprise
  • Quick lip compression — disagreement or withholding
  • Nostril flare — anger or arousal
  • Rapid eye blink — stress or discomfort
  • Asymmetrical smile — insincerity or mixed feelings

“The body says what the mouth will not. Learn to listen with your eyes.”

Step 3: Hand Gestures and Palm Display

  • Open palms facing up — honesty, openness, submission
  • Palms facing down — authority, certainty, dominance
  • Hidden hands — concealment, discomfort
  • Steepled fingers — confidence, authority
  • Self-touching (neck, face) — self-soothing, anxiety

Step 4: Eye Patterns

Beyond physiognomy, how people use their eyes in conversation reveals their mental state:

  • Looking up and to the right — constructing or imagining (visual)
  • Looking up and to the left — recalling visual memories
  • Looking to the side — processing auditory information
  • Looking down — accessing feelings or internal dialogue
  • Sustained eye contact — confidence, connection, or challenge

Step 5: Posture and Proximity

  • Leaning in — interest and engagement
  • Leaning back — evaluation or disengagement
  • Crossed arms — defensive (context matters — could also be comfort)
  • Mirroring your posture — rapport and agreement
  • Taking up space — confidence and dominance

Step 6: The Smile Decoder

Not all smiles are created equal:

  • Duchenne smile (eyes crinkle) — genuine happiness
  • Social smile (mouth only) — politeness, social obligation
  • Tight-lipped smile — hiding something or withholding opinion
  • Asymmetrical smile — sarcasm or contempt
  • Slow-spreading smile — genuine warmth building

Step 7: Clusters, Not Isolated Signals

The golden rule of body language reading: never interpret a single gesture in isolation. Look for clusters of signals that tell the same story:

  • Someone who crosses their arms, averts their gaze, and angles their body away is likely uncomfortable
  • Someone who leans in, makes eye contact, and mirrors your gestures is engaged and interested

Context matters enormously. Crossed arms in a cold room mean something different than crossed arms during a difficult conversation.

Practice Daily

Start observing body language in low-stakes situations — coffee shops, public transport, meetings. The more you practice, the more naturally you’ll read the unspoken conversation happening all around you.