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How to Articulate Your Thoughts More Clearly Than 99% of People

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Every time you speak, people are making

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a decision. Is this someone I can trust

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or is this someone that I tune out of?

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Running my company, acquisition.com,

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taught me this. Leadership lives or dies

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by your communication. If you cannot

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communicate like a leader, then you will

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never be trusted like one. So, let me

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show you the five behaviors that are

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quietly killing your executive presence

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and exactly what to do instead. Number

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one is stop overexplaining. You can have

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the best ideas in the room, but if you

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can't actually communicate them clearly,

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you will always follow somebody who can.

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And the thing is is that trust erodess

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with every weak behavior that you let

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slide. You don't need to add behaviors

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to be taken seriously. You actually just

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need to eliminate the ones that make you

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look weak. The most intelligent people

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in the room, they rarely say the most.

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They actually usually say the least, but

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every word that they say lands with

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people that are there. I used to be the

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queen of overexplaining. And and I did

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it for multiple reasons. One, I felt

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like if I didn't give people every

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single thing from my brain that they

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weren't going to understand the concept

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when it was actually the fact that I

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didn't know how to simplify concepts.

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The second is that I felt not sure in

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what I was saying. And so I talked

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around the thing a million ways until I

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finally was like, does the person

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understand the message? And then the

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third thing was that if somebody wasn't

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giving me the reaction that I wanted, I

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felt unsure, uncertain, doubtful. So I

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kept talking and it was out of

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nervousness. And so it wasn't until I

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got into a setting where I was leading a

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big team where I realized that I watched

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myself on a meeting and I was replaying

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it because I felt like I didn't get the

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reaction I wanted out of my team and

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when I watched them watching me, I was

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just talking in circles. At some point

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they tune out. They're like you're just

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said it six times already. Like I don't

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need to hear you say it again, lady.

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Like we already know. The second is that

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I didn't come off confident. So people

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start to check out because they're like

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suddenly they're like well I don't want

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to listen to you because you're not an

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expert. Because experts and people who

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are confident and people who know their

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they don't need to talk that much about

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the thing. They just say it and they

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assume that you understand. They move

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on. Here's the thing. If you pause and

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you're okay with silence, it gives

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people time to process and respect your

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words. Authority is felt when one speaks

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as if they're expected to be heard, not

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as if they're hoping to be heard. So

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when your communication's tight, your

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thinking appears sharp, even if it's

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imperfect. When people are trying to

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improve their executive presence, the

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first thing that I say is you have less

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time to talk. They're usually taking up

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way too much time when they're speaking.

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A trick that I do with my executives,

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for example, is that when I'm having

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them present in our quarterly off sites,

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in our meetings, often times they say,

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"Well, how many slides can I get?" I'm

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like, "It's not about how many slides

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you get. You get 2 minutes to talk.

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However many slides you want in there,

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great." But I try to constrain the

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amount of talk time they have because it

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will constrain them to a certain amount

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of time which makes them bring the

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message down to only the most important

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points because if not right is most of

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the time they're overexlaining and

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overexlaining makes them sound insecure

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which is why people don't listen to you

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in the first place or take you

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seriously. There's a quote by Warren

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Buffett that says the one easy way to

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become worth 50% more than you are right

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now is literally just to hone in on your

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communication skills. Number two is that

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we want to stop fidgeting. what you say

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does not matter if your body language is

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saying the opposite. People won't follow

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somebody who looks uncertain. So if your

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voice and your body are not aligning,

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people don't trust either of those

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things because your energy reads as

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nervous and uncertain. And people don't

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want to follow somebody who comes off

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nervous and uncertain. So instead,

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instead of being nervous and just and

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chewing gum like I'll do that, and

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playing with your hair and playing with

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your nails and like doing all sorts of

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things, instead you want to be

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controlled, precise, and slow. Now, why

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does this work? One, having a strong

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posture, having a strong presence,

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standing up straight, putting your hands

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together, having your shoulders back,

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sitting up straight, that shows that

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you're grounded, even if you are unsure.

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And it also signals to you that you're

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grounded. The second is that the way

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that you position yourself literally

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signals to somebody how you feel about

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yourself. So, think about somebody who's

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really confident in themselves. And then

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think about how they stand. Stand that

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way. Right? If somebody's very

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confident, they're standing like this.

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They might be using a lot of gestures.

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They feel open. They feel big and

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they're taking up a lot of space. Right?

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When you think about somebody who's not

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confident, you probably think of like

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more hunched over like this. They're

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doing some uncertain stuff. It looks

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fidgety and they're slouching. They

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don't look sure about themselves. I

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remember actually that I had a director

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of operations and she was really great

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at managing projects. But the moment

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that it got to, okay, we're going to

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command the team, we're going to tell

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the team what to do, she had the

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weirdest fidgeting. And so she would do

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two things. One, she would bite her

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nails when I go on the calls. She

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wouldn't stop biting her nails. and she

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would be talking her nails. And I was

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like, it's so such a little thing, but

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it makes a difference. And the second

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thing she would do is she would

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constantly be doing like this with her

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hair and just playing with her hair and

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she wouldn't ever stop fidgeting. And

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her fidgeting actually signaled to me

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that she was nervous or uncertain. And

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so I had a call with her and I said,

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"Hey, I actually think the one thing

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that you could do that would make the

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biggest difference into how you lead

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this team is I just need you to get some

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fake nails so you stop biting them." And

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so it was really funny because she

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actually went to the nail salon, got

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fake nails, and then she stopped biting

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her nails. that it actually made her

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look much more confident with the team

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because she didn't have this nervous

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fidget that she was doing. Think about

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how if you see a CEO on a stage versus,

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let's say, a customer support rep, how

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do you think they're going to show up

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differently? How are they going to walk?

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How are they going to talk? Where are

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they going to put their hands? How are

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they going to move their hands? It's

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like the CEO is probably going to have

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very intentional gestures. They're going

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to use their hands to tell a story.

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They're going to bring people into it.

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Whereas the customer support rep might

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be fidgeting. They might be talking like

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this. They might be going like this.

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They might be, you know, rubbing their

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arm. They might be playing with their

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hair. And so you have to remember what

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executive presence looks like. And most

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people have some kind of nervous fidget

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that they do or they ramble. And those

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things distract them from what they're

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saying. It steals their confidence and

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it seals attention that the audience

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would have on what you're saying. And

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now they're watching the thing that

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you're doing. So end of the day, we want

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to replace the nervous fidgets, the

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slouching, the weird gestures with

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adopting a slow, precise, and grounded

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posture and movement that make people

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