Charismatic
Communication - Words and Emotions
A speech or appeal without
emotion is like a Car without an Engine. Media research reinforces
how emotions drive viewing and listening choices in selected
audiences in radio and television. Even ‘Hate Radio’, as we know
it, gains its audiences by pressing the emotional Hot Buttons of
targeted audiences: outrage buttons, disgust buttons, anger
buttons, despair buttons, particularly in the upper demographics.
This form of stimulation reinforces a hate radio
audience’s pre-existing emotions and may even give them pleasure.
Feelings drive actions: the action media operators are, and as a
speaker you should be, most concerned about is encouraging
listeners to commit the act of choice in favour of their products
and services - in other words, tune in, and stay tuned in. The
same thing applies in presentations to groups – you need your
listeners to tune in and stay tuned in if your message is to be
heard.
The challenge is, then, to decide on the kind of
emotions you wish to evoke in your audiences: emotions which drive
listeners to act and choose to listen to you and your message.
They don’t have to be negative emotions like fear, hate, jealousy
or outrage, although on some occasions they can legitimately be
associated with your message.
They can be emotions that are more useful to
people’s everyday lives. They can be emotions which stir people to
create a better future, generating optimism, hope, humour,
strength, control, curiosity, and so on. So, if people think-feel
and then commit the act of choice to listen or not listen to you,
what kind of emotions could you stir ethically? Below is an
incomplete list that you may like to add to:
curiosity confidence exhilaration enthusiasm
shock humour self-control empowerment desire hope expectation
anticipation titillation thrill scepticism suspense belonging
sense of knowing sympathy empathy discovery happiness joy material
desire (greed?) status triumph (winning) pleasure concern
motivation comfort encouragement re-assurance disbelief courage
passion certainty
Content is all about positioning. If the content
of your message regularly stirs a range of the above emotions,
people will associate you with the generally useful emotions
evoked. This is what is meant by gaining a ‘Share of Heart’.
By tapping appropriate emotions you can
associate pleasure and stimulation with what you’re doing. The
linkage of pleasure and stimulation to the experience of listening
to your presentation greatly enhances the possibility of your
message being taken on board by your audience.
Only Giving Head?
The other part of the thought-feeling dyad is
thinking, and the myth that thoughts and feelings can be
separated. This myth gives rise to the idea that you can have a
discourse, debate, or just a plan old conversation and not feel
anything at all.
Much of the rhetoric that many speakers engage
in, particularly professionals and politicians, is based on the
spurious notion that you can separate thoughts from feeling. This
reveals itself in interesting ways:
• ‘Hard heads’ who suppress the music and
emotion of their voices because it gives them “credibility” and
“balance”.
• Stories told in abstract language, which
removes the ‘life’ from the story.
• Real serious discourses with ‘analysis’,
without real life examples in which to embed an audience’s
experience.
• Speakers sounding as if they have the world on
their shoulders and every word uttered must be spoken with
gravity.
• Presenters with personal phobias that reflect
a fear of so-called trivialisation.
• Discourse using language that removes the
speakers or moderator from the ‘dirty world’ of human emotions.
• Conversations conducted in ‘surface rhetoric’,
such as econo-speak, pollie-speak, or in-house shorthand.
You might be interested to know that the
pre-scientific notion of separating thoughts from emotions was
revived and championed by a philosopher called Descartes, who
lived a couple of hundred years ago. The notion had been around
since biblical times, but he picked it up and ran with it. He
proclaimed that somewhere, he wasn’t quite sure where, there
existed absolute ‘truth’. His method of finding that somewhere was
to somehow lapse into “pure rationality”, take a “a God’s Eye
view”, in the hope that all would be revealed. He failed.
In many ways, the assumption that there is such
a thing as objectivity, pure rationality, non-bias, and dispassion
still governs much of the practice of so-called rational debate
and discourse.
Rational debate, by its very rules, demands that
you separate thoughts from feelings, and engage in “unfeeling”
dialogue. This still happens in some pockets of academia as well
as business and the media. Interestingly, modern psychology has a
name for people who have stopped feeling for others, or can’t
think-feel in the concrete realm any more. They’re called
sociopaths.
(c) desmond Guilfoyle 2006
Desmond Guilfoyle in an award winning commentator on influence,
persuasion and charisma. He has written three books on those
subjects and his book 'The Charisma Effect' has been published in
seven languages around the globe. He can be contacted at
mondodec@tpg.com.au For
further articles, tips and information visit his blog at
http://charismacom.blogspot.com/
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