Turchet taught that the face is a map of three zones: the forehead (thought), the eyes/nose (emotion), and the mouth/chin (expression). When a person lies, there is often a disconnect between these zones.
This is the movement of relating . It involves turning the torso, tilting the head, and circular gestures. It implies hesitation or social navigation.
How does the person transition from sitting to standing? A rigid person uses pure muscle force (jerky). A sagging person uses gravity (heavy collapse). The secret is the flow.
Since I cannot directly transmit a copyrighted PDF file, I have crafted a story that encapsulates the core philosophy and techniques found in Philippe Turchet’s work, The Secrets of Body Language (originally Le langage secret du corps ).
Turchet taught that the face is a map of three zones: the forehead (thought), the eyes/nose (emotion), and the mouth/chin (expression). When a person lies, there is often a disconnect between these zones.
This is the movement of relating . It involves turning the torso, tilting the head, and circular gestures. It implies hesitation or social navigation.
How does the person transition from sitting to standing? A rigid person uses pure muscle force (jerky). A sagging person uses gravity (heavy collapse). The secret is the flow.
Since I cannot directly transmit a copyrighted PDF file, I have crafted a story that encapsulates the core philosophy and techniques found in Philippe Turchet’s work, The Secrets of Body Language (originally Le langage secret du corps ).