Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh. --Matthew, XII, 34
Other parts of the body assist the speaker, but the hands speak themselves. --Quintilian
Courtship. Any of several nonverbal signs exchanged during the conversation phase of
courtship.
Usage: From preverbal cues of presence, gender, friendliness (willingness to be approached), and sexual attractiveness, men and women progress to the third or speaking stage of courtship. Talking to a stranger is a formidable hurdle in the progression to intimacy. Many couples remain locked in nonverbal dialogue, unable to utter a word (see STRANGER ANXIETY). Those who do converse move beyond posturing to the harsher reality of speech.
Exclusive duo. To speak, a man rotates his face toward a woman. She revolves her face to gaze back into his eyes. Conversation locks the pair in a mini-territory as a courting duo. The visual focus on each other's lips, eyes, cheeks, and brows excludes others nearby, and reveals subtle cues with which to probe possibilities of physical intimacy. Gazing too long (see EYE CONTACT), turning the face too far to one side (CUT-OFF), or in-rolling the lips to a thin line (LIP-COMPRESSION) may be unconsciously decoded as negative cues.
Lunch signals. Perhaps the most common nonverbal device for reducing conversation-phase
stress is eating. Chewing, crunching, and grinding reduce tension. Like a
drug, food engages our nervous system's calmer parasympathetic division (see REST-AND-DIGEST). A tranquil mood arrives through ventromedial-nucleus circuits of the hypothalamus
(Guyton 1996), as feelings of "tameness" come on through stimulation of the brain's reward centers
(Guyton 1996). Heartbeat slows, pupils constrict, palms warm and dry. Relaxation and peace of
mind (the reverse of fight-or-flight) make it easier for couples to bond through words. Eating
together stimulates bonding through the principle of isopraxism as couples
share nachos, clink glasses, and break fortune cookies together. (N.B.: The soft, tactile cues used
while making love (see LOVE SIGNALS V) also reflect the body's parasympathetic mode.)
Media. "More than anything else, women want you to make them laugh" (according to Esquire magazine [Spokesman-Review, Feb. 7, 1999]).
Oral exam. Speaking tests the limits of physical closeness. While nonverbal cues show the body's
"hardware," words reveal the verbal software of personal ideas, values, intelligence, and inner
notions about life and living. Thus, the conversation phase begins a deep probing, as subtle and pointed questions
are asked. The face-to-face closeness of speech
accents the impact of nonverbal signs, signals, and cues as well.
Oral gambit. Polls reveal that what is said in the opening line matters less than the saying (i.e., the content) itself. According to Parade Magazine, a simple "Hi" works 71% of the time for men and 100% of the time for women to launch the conversation phase. (N.B.: What popular polls exclude is the preparatory posturing needed to prompt a verbal reply.)
RESEARCH REPORTS: 1. "Speaking, or more broadly, linguistic-like contact--which would
include American Sign Language, writing [e.g., e-mail], using mutually unintelligible languages,
and so on--appears to be essential if courtship is to proceed" (Givens 1978:351). 2. Women rate
men more physically and sexually attractive when they verbally a. solicit a partner's opinion, b. show sensitivity to a partner's perspective, and c. display warmth and "agreeableness" (Bower
1991). 3. Men rate highly agreeable women as most attractive and desirable as dates (Bower
1991). 4. "The topic of conversation is irrelevant to the formation of a bond. . . . It is highly
animated, responsive, immediate, and submissive" (Burgoon et al. 1989:326). 5. Across cultures,
women seek mates who speak about their ambition, industriousness, and good financial
prospects (Bower 1995). 6. "Thoughts and emotions are interwoven: every thought, however
bland, almost always carries with it some emotional undertone, however subtle" (Restak
1995:21).
Neuro-notes. A recent invention, vocal language dates back only about 200,000 years. As human primates, we have not fully come to grips with the prolonged, face-to-face closeness required for speech. Speaking to a stranger stresses our autonomic nervous system's sympathetic (fight-or-flight) division, which a. speeds heartbeat, b. dilates pupils, and c. cools and moistens hands. The limbic brain's hypothalamus instructs the pituitary gland to release hormones into the circulatory system, arousing our blood, sweat, and fears.
See also LOVE SIGNALS IV.
Copyright © 1998 - 2005 (David B. Givens/Center for Nonverbal Studies)
Detail of photo (copyright George Strock)
For more information, see Givens, David B. (2005). Love Signals: A Practical Field Guide to the Body Language of Courtship, St. Martin's Press, New York.