How To Lie - Tips And Tricks
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How To Lie - Tips And Tricks
Learn how, the professional way!
Step 1: Three Elements of Lying
How to lie or how to tell if somebody else is lying is through three elements; three things eye movement, voice levels and body language. In this video you are going to learn how to recognize all f these three things.
Step 2: The Eyes
When somebody is telling the truth his eyes will roll left. When somebody is lying his eyes will roll right. What a person is accessing now is his front lobe is using the blue part shown here creating a left eye roll. When accessing the back lobe the creative part of the brain (the red shown here), the person is probably lying creating a right eye roll.
Step 3: Signs in the Speech
If somebody’s speech starts off hard and suddenly takes shape its probably a lie because the second the lie is invented the whole subject makes more sense and becomes more fluent.
Step 4: Body Language
Noticing a few body language signs, we often find in liars expressions. First of all convince yourself that your lie is actually the truth. Always start a new lie with at least 20 percent of truth in it. As an example I have a red car you know that right. Well yesterday I had a crash. Now you can lie but others cannot lie to you.
Tips & Comments
This is very clever and sort of works, eye movement is a well documented indicator of lying and you an find out lots more about it by reading up on NLP (Neuro Linguistic Programming). However, it's not fool proof and the fact is that people don't, sadly, fall into these neat and predictable patterns of behaviour. If you use eye movement along with lots and lots of other factors then yes it's helpfull but don't fall into the trap of thinking it's the "be-all and end-all" of lie detection. Polygraph lie detectors monitor eye movements as well as body movement and sweat production and heart beat etc and it's perfectly possible to beat them and in fact in many cases they simply get it wrong. All in all, a nice idea and i wish it were that simple, but sadly it's not. Aove all, lie detections takes a LOT of practise. Check out Derren Brown's work for fantastic examples of this kind of work.
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