Senior video producer Jackie Padilla contributed to the production of this story. June 28, 2024 from Politico Website
and President Joe Biden participate in the CNN Presidential Debate on Thursday. Gerald Herbert/AP
Body language spoke louder than words last night...
But unlike many of you, I didn't silence the
back-and-forth between President Joe Biden and former President
Donald Trump because I wanted to tune them out. I did it because I
wanted to understand them better.
I've found that words, especially those of politicians, too easily twist the truth.
So I started the debate with the sound off to see
what the two contenders were really thinking and feeling.
You may not have learned much that you didn't already know about Trump and Biden during the debate. But decoding their body language offers invaluable insights to get to know them better that you didn't hear in their speeches.
Here's everything I noticed on the stage...
It has been a tradition as far back as I can remember.
But with all the baggage between
Trump and
Biden,
the lack of a handshake didn't surprise me. It was a nonverbal sign
that this election will be every bit as divisive as many voters
feared it would be.
But as we age, we lose a lot of the nerves that help us keep our balance.
The Merkel, Meissner, Ruffini and Pacinian nerve cells on and just below the skin - all so robust when we are young, able to detect the most delicate touch, the slightest change in pressure and temperature, the subtlest movement or vibration - begin to lose sensation as we age.
The tactile messages they send along the nervous system take longer to reach the brain also, so we adapt as we age and we walk slower, more carefully - nature is not kind.
As the Sural nerve of the foot (along the outside edge) or the Medial Plantar nerve (which innervates the big toe) age, we also lose our ability to sense where we are walking with precision so that also forces us to slow down.
Well, those nerves don't always affect cycling or swimming - but they do impact walking.
You might think that sounds superficial, but appearances can make a big difference.
Just think of how disheveled
Richard Nixon looked - with his 5 o'clock shadow, lack of
makeup and pale complexion - next to a young, tanned,
make-up-wearing senator named John F. Kennedy in the first
televised debate in 1960.
It was another indicator that Biden appeared somewhat frail.
He was still as a statue at times, especially in the first 40 minutes or so.
His lack of movement was especially striking next
to Trump, who drew the viewer's eye with dynamic hand motions and
aggressive finger pointing that emphasized his arguments, making him
appear much more energetic.
Sure, it might be because he wanted to be respectful and listen intently. But it could also be because, as we age, our gestures become more economical.
Biden's nonverbal communication did nothing to counter the narrative that his age is catching up to him. Neither, for that matter, did his verbal communication.
I won't comment on the substance of what either candidate said - that's a matter for a different kind of expert - but the hoarse timbre of Biden's voice immediately distracted most viewers from his arguments.
His supporters will no doubt argue that he talks all the time as part of his presidential duties and therefore had a tired voice, but nonetheless, it detracted from his speech.
When I consult with people about public speaking, I always tell them that, if they're suffering from a cold or some vocal malady, they should mention it to let people know why they sound the way they sound.
Otherwise, as with Biden last night, their timbre and tone draw more focus than their actual words...
Biden and Trump both exhibited eyelid flutters, but they did so at different times and for different reasons.
Overall, Trump has the most expressive eyes - but not in a good way.
When he hears something he doesn't like, his eyelids come down hard and linger in a downcast position. The fifth cranial nerve (C5) innervates the eyelids, and we subconsciously force them closed to put pressure on the eyeball and the eyelids themselves.
It is an adaptive behavior, like facial touching,
that helps us to relieve temporary stress - a way to self-soothe.
But with Trump, it's something different:
Humans gesture upward, against gravity - raising our hands or our eyebrows, for example - as a kind of somatic exclamation point.
But in Trump's case, the raised eyebrows communicate not surprise but discomfort or suspicion.
Ever since he's appeared on television, Trump has displayed an idiosyncratic behavior that gives away his feelings of disagreement, dislike or disdain, and it showed up plenty of times during the debate:
He's not alone.
Most of us exhibit puckered or pursed lips when we hear something we dislike or disagree with. It seems to be a deeply ingrained behavior, not something we learn visually; I've observed the very same behavior in children who were born blind.
It's a kind of tic that others can take advantage of in, say, a business negotiation, or a poker game - or a presidential debate...
Several times, when Trump heard something
negative, he exhibited a behavior I call a deflective
pseudo-smile.
But with Trump's deflective smile, the lips compress tight, the commissures (or corners) of the mouth tightly pull upward and laterally, almost like you'd see on a clown's face, and the eyebrows arch quite high.
It's a way to pretend something wasn't hurtful when, in fact, it was.
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