dimanche 4 septembre 2016

How to Be More Talkative With Girl And People In Good Way And Funny

Many shy and socially anxious people are interested in learning how to be more talkative. Some people seem to naturally be talkative and connect easy with others. They on the other hand struggle with this.
The good news is that you don’t have to struggle. Equipped with some savvy advice on how to be more talkative, you can get out of your shell and participate more in conversations with other people.
As a social confidence coach, one of my biggest delights is to see my clients speedily become more talkative under my guidance. I want to reveal to you the top four pieces of advice regarding how to be more talkative that they apply to achieve this.






Step 1: Manage Your Expectations

People who are quiet go into social settings with flawed expectations that make it almost impossible for them to be social and talkative.
For example, the may expect that everybody should like them, or they should never say something off beam, or they should never upset others.
With these kinds of expectations, you’re bound to be shy in social situations. Because almost anything you could say risks not meeting one or more of them. This is why an important step in learning how to be more talkative is to manage your expectations.
Managing your expectations means to identify what you, consciously or subconsciously, demand of yourself and others in social interactions. And then, to correct these demands: to make them less perfectionist and more down to earth.
This will allow you to feel more at ease in social settings, open up more and enjoy conversation more.
For a step by step explanation of how to manage your expectations and take the pressure off yourself, watch this exclusive presentation I created.

Step 2: Practice Being More Spontaneous

Another pattern in the behavior of quiet people is that they think too much before they say something.
They wanna be sure they always say the smart, funny or right thing and they never say the silly, weird or wrong thing, which is also related to the unreasonable expectations they have.
Consequently, they tend to over-think every sentence they could utter. And when you think too much about something, you always find fault in it and you often end up not saying it.
An excellent exercise for overcoming this is to practice being more impulsive during conversations. What you do is you say what pops into your head before getting a change to evaluate it thoroughly. You think less and you talk more.
As a result, not only that you’re more involved in conversations, but in the long run, you also build confidence in yourself and become comfortable with being more talkative. This is what makes the exercise cool.

Step 3: Remove Your Limiting Beliefs

Having unreasonable expectations, thinking too much and being quiet in social settings are ultimately mere symptoms of certain beliefs you posses.
Most shy or socially anxious people I’ve met or coached don’t hold themselves in high regard, they think they must be perfect or they think others are better than they are. This is the root of their problem.
If you want to permanently eliminate your nervousness in social settings and become more talkative, you need to get to the root of the problem and fix it from there. You need to change a precise cluster of beliefs you hold.
This is not only a helpful insight regarding how to become more talkative, but also a helpful insight to transform your relationships with others completely. And from there, your whole life.
I have a special free guide for you in which I’ll show you how to remove your limiting beliefs and blast away your anxiety in social settings.

Step 4: Treat This as a Process

Today you can become a bit more talkative than yesterday. And tomorrow you can become a bit more talkative than today. And in a few weeks, you’ll have accomplished one mind-blowing transformation.
However, you won’t turn from shy to talkative overnight. Don’t expect this, because you’re just adding to those unrealistic expectations that work against you.
The truth is that human psychology doesn’t work that way. It takes some time and practice to change. Not a lot if you do it the right way, but it does take some.
Treat this as a process, not as a quick fix. Work on becoming more talkative day by day, optimize the process, persist, and focus on making steady progress. This is the attitude that individuals who win at this game have.
I can vouch from experience that learning how to be more talkative and effectively applying this knowledge will open a lot of doors for you. You’ll be able to meet more people, make more friends, get more dates and get ahead in your career.
When you’re comfortable with expressing yourself and letting the world know you as you are, you can do great things with your life.

Step 5:  Some Examples


  • Family
    • "How's your mom these days?" or "How are your parents doing?"
    • "How many brothers and sisters do you have?" or "Did you all get along?"
    • "What was your best/worst family vacation?"
    •  
  • Occupation
    • "What do you do?" or "How are you enjoying your new job?"
    • "What's the toughest thing you've got going on at work?" or "What was the most interesting thing you did there this week?"
    • "What are the people you work with like?"
    •  
  • Recreation
    • "What do you do for fun?" or "What is there to do around here for fun?"
    • "How long have you been doing that?"
    • "Do you have a regular group of people you do that with?"
    •  
  • Motivation
    • "What do you want to do after school?" or "Do you think you'll be at that job for long? What's your dream job?"
    • "What do you want to be doing, down the road?"

 

Step 6:  Read the other person's body language for clues

some people just don't want to talk  and it won't make the situation better if you force it. Pay close attention for people who are displaying closed body language and disengage from the conversation. Focus your talkative skills on someone else instead.

  • Closed body language includes things like looking over your head and around the room, as if looking for an exit. Closed or crossed arms are sometimes a sign of closed body language, as well as leaning one's shoulder toward you, or away from you.
  • Open body language consists of leaning forward, making eye contact, and listen to the other person

Step 7 : Smile 

A lot of conversation is non-verbal. People are a lot more willing to engage happy, open, friendly-looking people in conversation. You can do a lot to encourage other people in conversation and get them to engage you if you use open body language and smile.
  • You don't have to look like a grinning idiot, just look like you're happy to be where you are, even if you're feeling uncomfortable. No furrowed brows and sour faces. Lift your eyebrows and keep your chin up. Smile.

 


 

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