darby54 wrote:
Same here. By the way, I have no trouble reading people. But they can't read me. My normal self is still and quiet, and stress can make me go utterly frozen and mute.
I can read people up to a point, it's just the visual subtleties that I don't always get.
People's emotional tone of voice I can gauge quite well, probably better than facial expression.
I also can't often tell if someone means to talk to me or someone else if they say "Hello", especially in a crowd situation. I often have no idea if the person is waving at me or someone else so it often takes a few seconds to register. I wouldn't have much of a clue as to how to approach people and say "Hello", so I don't usually, because I don't want to intrude if they're busy or trying to talk to someone else. I used to make terrible mistakes approaching people. That's why I usually have to wait for other people to approach me first: it's a pain, but can't really be helped.
I just can't help wondering if I've been brought up in an environment where direct eye contact wasn't used as much as elsewhere or where visual, emotional signals were simpler and more obvious.
I saw this because I've often found that I can't keep up with what's going on socially outside the few friends and family I do know: I find the pace too fast and the signals too subtle. I freeze, look away or just crawl quietly into a corner if I'm bewildered and don't know what to do, if it's all the signals are coming at me too intensely or too fast.
I have had a few "complaints" from people that couldn't read me at times.
I've often been asked if I'm "Alright." probably because people see me on my own a lot and because I can't initiate conversations easily, if at all.
As for "writing body language" I wonder about animation: drawing/modeling body language and facial expressions and representing these in symbolic/simplified forms.
That's what first went through my mind when you mentioned "writing body language", so sorry.
I suppose that's as close to "writing body language" without actually doing it as one can get.
Body language requires third and fourth dimensions that the written word doesn't really do justice to.