Read People Like a Book: How to Analyze, Understand, and Predict People’s Emotions, Thoughts, Intentions, and Behaviors
By Patrick King
4.5/5
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About this ebook
Speed read people, decipher body language, detect lies, and understand human nature.
Is it possible to analyze people without them saying a word? Yes, it is. Learn how to become a “mind reader” and forge deep connections.
How to get inside people’s heads without them knowing.
Read People Like a Book isn’t a normal book on body language of facial expressions. Yes, it includes all of those things, as well as new techniques on how to truly detect lies in your everyday life, but this book is more about understanding human psychology and nature.
We are who we are because of our experiences and pasts, and this guides our habits and behaviors more than anything else. Parts of this book read like the most interesting and applicable psychology textbook you’ve ever read. Take a look inside yourself and others!
Understand the subtle signals that you are sending out and increase your emotional intelligence.
Patrick King is an internationally bestselling author and social skills coach. His writing draws of a variety of sources, from scientific research, academic experience, coaching, and real life experience.
Learn the keys to influencing and persuading others.
•What people’s limbs can tell us about their emotions.
•Why lie detecting isn’t so reliable when ignoring context.
•Diagnosing personality as a means to understanding motivation.
•Deducing the most with the least amount of information.
•Exactly the kinds of eye contact to use and avoid
Find shortcuts to connect quickly and deeply with strangers.
The art of reading and analyzing people is truly the art of understanding human nature. Consider it like a cheat code that will allow you to see through people’s actions and words.
Decode people’s thoughts and intentions, and you can go in any direction you want with them.
Patrick King
Patrick King is a social interaction specialist/dating, online dating, image, and communication and social skills coach based in San Francisco, California. His work has been featured on numerous national publications such as Inc.com, and he’s achieved status as a #1 Amazon best-selling dating and relationships author. He writes frequently on dating, love, sex, and relationships. Learn more about Patrick at his website, patrickkingconsulting.com.
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Reviews for Read People Like a Book
36 ratings5 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5It's great tool to understand more people. If you use more images to symbolize what we are reading it would be good. Like enneagram. You can Google it
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5JOGENDRAPUR FARMERS PRODUCER COMPANY LIMITED is a Great Trusted Business development Orgnization
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Generally a great book. Taught me tons of things, overall the book was very well written and seemed very applicable to real word situations.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This book Is amazing! I love it from the start to the end. I learn so many new things and even write whole psychologi test from this book. 10/10
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I loved this book, A Must read! Quite a bit of useful information.
1 person found this helpful
Book preview
Read People Like a Book - Patrick King
Behaviors
Read People Like a Book:
How to Analyze Understand, and Predict People’s Emotions, Thoughts, Intentions, and Behaviors
By Patrick King
Social Interaction and Conversation Coach at www.PatrickKingConsulting.com
< < CLICK HERE for your FREE 25-PAGE MINIBOOK: Conversation Tactics, Worksheets, and Exercises. > >
--9 proven techniques to avoid awkward silence
--How to be scientifically funnier and more likable
--How to be wittier and quicker instantly
--Making a great impression with anyone
Table of Contents
Read People Like a Book: How to Analyze Understand, and Predict People’s Emotions, Thoughts, Intentions, and Behaviors
Table of Contents
Introduction
Why You’re Probably Doing it Wrong
The Problem of Objectivity
Chapter 1. Motivation as a Behavioral Predictor
Motivation as an Expression of the Shadow
Our Inner Child Still Lives
The Motivation Factor—Pleasure or Pain
The Pyramid of Needs
Defense of the Ego
Chapter 2. The Body, the Face, and Clusters
Look at my Face
Body Talk
Putting it All Together
The Human Body is a Whole—Read It that Way
Thinking in Terms of Message Clusters
Chapter 3. Personality Science and Typology
Test Your Personality
The Big Five
Jung and the MBTI
Keirsey’s Temperaments
The Enneagram
Chapter 4. Lie Detection 101 (and Caveats)
The Problem: Uncertainty
It’s All About the Conversation
Use the Element of Surprise
How to Increase Cognitive Load
General Tips for Better-than-Average Lie-Detecting
Chapter 5. Using the Power of Observation
How to Use Thin Slicing
Making Smart Observations
Read People like Sherlock Holmes Reads a Crime Scene
Observation can be Active: How to Use Questions
Indirect Questions; Direct Information
Summary Guide
Introduction
Have you ever met someone who seemed to just have a natural gift for getting other people? They appear to be blessed with an instinctive understanding of how other people tick and why they behave as they do, to such an extent that they can often predict what they’ll say or feel.
These are the people who know how to talk so that others really hear them, or the people who can quickly detect when someone is lying or trying to manipulate them. Sometimes, such a person may perceive someone else’s emotions and understand their motivations to a degree that even exceeds that person’s insight into themselves.
It can seem like a superpower. How do they do it?
The truth is that this ability is not really anything mystical, but a skill like any other that can actually be learned and mastered. While some might call it emotional intelligence or simple social awareness, others may see it as more akin to what a clinical psychologist or psychiatrist may do when they conduct an intake interview with a new patient. On the other hand, you may see this skill as something that a seasoned FBI agent, private detective, or police officer may develop with experience.
In this book, we’re going to be looking closely at all the ways we can develop these skills in ourselves, without needing a psychology degree or any experience as a trained CIA interrogator.
Reading and analyzing people is no doubt a valuable skill to have. We encounter and interact with other people constantly and need to cooperate with them if we hope to have successful, harmonious lives. When we know how to quickly and accurately analyze someone’s character, behavior, and unspoken intentions, we can communicate more effectively and, to put it bluntly, get what we want.
We can adjust the way we communicate to make sure we’re really reaching our intended audience; we can spot when we are being deceived or influenced. We can also more easily comprehend even those people who are very different from us, and who work from very different values. Whether you’re trying to learn a little more about a person you’ve just met by snooping in their social media history, or interviewing a new employee, or trying to understand whether the mechanic is telling the truth about your car, reading people well is a priceless skill to have.
It’s crazy when you really think about it: every person you ever meet is essentially a mystery to you. How can we really know what is going on inside their minds? What they’re thinking, feeling, planning? How can we ever really understand what their behavior means, why they are motivated as they are, and even how they see and understand us?
Another person’s world is like a black box to us. All we have to go on are things outside of that black box—the words they say, their facial expressions and body language, their actions, our past history with them, their physical appearance, the tone and quality of their voice, and so on.
Before we go much further in our book, it’s worth acknowledging this undeniable fact—human beings are complex, living, changing organisms whose inner experience is essentially closed off inside of them. Though some might make claims otherwise, nobody can really state with any certainty that they know who somebody is completely.
That said, we can certainly become better at reading the observable signs. Theory of mind
is the term we use to describe the ability to think about other people’s cognitive and emotional realities. It’s the (perfectly human) desire to make a model about someone else’s thoughts, feelings, and actions. And like any model, it’s a simplification of the depth and complexity of the real person in front of us. Like any model, it has limitations and doesn’t always perfectly explain reality.
Our goal in learning to fine-tune our capacity to analyze people is to make best guesses.
What we learn to do is gather as much high-quality data about a person as we can, and analyze it intelligently. If we can input these small pieces of data into a robust and accurate model of human nature (or more than one model) the output we can obtain is a deeper understanding of the person. In the same way as an engineer can look at a complicated machine and infer its operation and intended function, we can learn to look at living, breathing human beings and analyze them to better understand the what, why, and how of their behavior.
In the chapters that follow, we’ll be looking at many different models—these are not competing theories, but rather different ways of looking at a human being. When used all together, we gain a fresh understanding of the people around us.
What we do with this understanding is up to us. We could use it to foster a richer and more compassionate attitude to those we care about. We could take our knowledge and apply it in the workspace or anywhere we need to cooperate and collaborate with a wide variety of different individuals. We can use it to become better parents or better romantic partners. We can use it to improve our small talk, to spot liars or those with an agenda, or to reconcile effectively with people during conflicts.
The moment we encounter someone new for the very first time is the moment we most need to have well-honed powers of perception and analysis. Even the least emotionally and socially intelligent people can learn something about other people if they engage with them long enough. But what we’re focused on in this book is primarily those skills that can allow you to gather genuinely useful information about near-strangers, preferably after just a single conversation.
We’ll dig a little deeper into mastering the art of a snap decision that is actually accurate, how to make appraisals of people’s personalities and values from their speech, their behavior, and even their personal possessions, how to read body language, and even how to detect a lie as it’s happening.
Another caveat before we dive in: analyzing and reading people is about much, much more than simply having hunches or knee-jerk emotional reactions about them. Though instinct and gut feeling may play a role, we are focused here on methods and models that have sound theoretical evidence and seek to go beyond simple bias or prejudice. After all, we actually want our analyses to be accurate if they’re to be any use to us!
When we analyze others, we take a methodical, logical approach.
What are the origins or causes of what we see in front of us, i.e., what is the historical element?
What are the psychological, social, and physiological mechanisms that sustain the behavior you’re witnessing?
What is the outcome or effect of this phenomenon in front of you? In other words, how does what you’re seeing play out in the rest of the environment?
How is the behavior you’re witnessing triggered by particular events, the behavior of others, or even as a response to you yourself?
In the chapters that follow, we’ll look at smart ways to structure your rational, data-driven analysis of the complex and fascinating people who cross your path. You may start to appreciate how this kind of analysis is at the root of so many other competencies. For example, knowing how to read people may improve your capacity for compassion, boost your communication skills, improve your negotiation abilities, help you set better boundaries, and the unexpected side effect: help you understand yourself better.
Why You’re Probably Doing it Wrong
Many people believe they’re good with people.
It’s very easy to boldly claim that you understand another person’s motivations, without ever really stopping to check if you’re correct. Confirmation bias, unfortunately, is a more likely explanation—i.e., you remember all those times your assessments were correct and ignore or downplay the times you clearly got it wrong. That, or you simply never ask if you’re right in the first place. How many times have you heard, I used to think so-and-so was such-and-such kind of person, but once I got to know them, I realized I was completely wrong about them
?
The fact is that people are often far less accurate judges of character than they like to believe. If you are reading this book, chances are you know that there are a few things you could probably learn. It never hurts to start a new endeavor on a blank slate. After all, nothing can get in the way of learning truly effective techniques like the conviction that you know everything already and don’t need to learn!
So, with that in mind, what are the obstacles to becoming brilliant at reading people?
Firstly, the biggest thing to remember is the effect of context. Maybe you’ve seen a listicle online to the effect of 5 Telltale Signs Someone is Lying,
and went on to see if you could spot any in real life. The trouble with this is obvious: is the person looking up and to the left because they’re telling a lie, or has their attention simply been caught by something on the roof?
In the same way, a person making an interesting Freudian slip
in conversation could be telling you a juicy secret about themselves—or they could simply be sleep deprived and literally just made a mistake. Context matters.
In the same vein, we cannot take a single statement, facial expression, behavior, or moment to tell us something definitive about the whole person. Have you not already done something today that, if analyzed alone, would lead to some completely nonsensical conclusions about your character? Analysis can only happen with data—not a single datum—and it can only happen when we are able to see broader trends.
These broader trends also need to be situated in the cultural context that the person you’re analyzing comes from. Some signs are universal, whereas others can vary. For example, talking while your hands are in your pockets is looked down upon in most cultures. Eye contact, on the other hand, can be a tricky affair. In America, eye contact is generally encouraged because it is considered a sign of honesty and intelligence. However, in places like Japan, eye contact is discouraged because it’s thought to be disrespectful. Similarly, a set of cues may mean one thing in your own culture, and something entirely different in another. It can be slightly difficult to remember these different models of interpretation initially, but as you practice the art, it’ll start coming to you naturally.
If a person does the same unusual thing five times in a single short conversation, then that’s something to pay attention to. If someone simply claims, I know that woman. She’s an introvert. I saw her reading a book once,
you wouldn’t exactly call them a master at unraveling the human psyche! So, it’s worth remembering another important principle: in our analysis, we look for patterns.
Another way that smart people can come to not-so-smart conclusions about others is if they fail to establish a baseline. The guy in front of you may be making