People often say that your feelings are “written all over your face.” That’s because our facial expressions are a main way we communicate emotions, whether that means smiling and crinkling our eyes when we’re happy or furrowing our brows and tensing our lips when we’re angry. But, according to some recent research led by Patty Van Cappellen at Duke University, our faces are not doing all of the heavy lifting when it comes to expressing feelings. Our body posture also plays a role.
Van Cappellen found that people perceived an expansive posture as representing dominance. But joy and awe were also represented by expansive postures—even more so than dominance—with hope involving the least expansive posture of the bunch.
However, the differences didn’t end there: Arm and head positions also mattered. For example, joyful postures were depicted by arms raised above the head and the head tilted upward, while awe postures showed hands touching the face or hovering near the head. Dominant postures, on the other hand, tended to display arms akimbo (hands on hips, elbows out) with the head facing forward.
This suggests that emotions are fully embodied—and not only communicated in the face.
This supports the idea that people look to body language to read others’ emotions.
These findings raise an interesting question: Do postures only communicate our feelings or could putting ourselves into a particular posture change the way we feel?
People were fitted with sensors to measure their nervous system and cardiac function and asked to strike one of three poses: hands raised and head uplifted; hands folded in front, head looking down; or arms at sides and looking straight ahead. The results showed that participants in a posture with raised arms and heads tilted upward had more positive feeling overall than those in other poses.
It could be that when you hold yourself in a particular way, it brings to mind memories of how you felt other times in that posture, and that’s what prompts the feelings.
Research implies that our body posture helps express our emotions and may help us feel certain emotions, too.
Emotion expression is what enables social relationships, and we’re showing that you could potentially rewire yourself using different postures
At Eaton Chiropractic we look at your body and your life as a whole. If you have a friend, family member or coworker who is looking to truly elevate their health have them give the team a call at 770-429-9733 for an initial consultation done at our expense. We are in network with all insurance, including Medicare and Kaiser.
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