I am a Behaviour analysis and what I find, in myself and in those who I work with, is that, the behaviours that we reduce come back in full force at the conclusion of the treatment. Have you observed this? How do we overcome this, and are we really reducing these behaviours or just surpressing them until they finally re group and come back again. What's happening in these situations?
Hey there Joe! I am really enjoying learning from you and thank you sir for your beautiful mind and wonderful insight!! Oh how I wish I could just volunteer for you guys!!! What a nightmare we are addressing!! Terrible! Well, you know where everyone lives, just know, I am here, and if you need a tough old cowgirl in Kentucky, you just come get me!!
I guess my limbic is overdoing its job. I am too easy to spook. I would already be seeing that it is just my coworker I almost walked into but can't stop screaming right away. Or my husband walks into the kitchen and starts talking to me. I jump up. He would say "who did you expect to see here if you got so scared?" Nobody. I expected nobody. You should start talking from afar or wear a bell on your neck. Or expecting a phone call and jump when it rings. And somehow many people say I can be very intimidating. I guess when I'm not spooked lol
Mr. Joe you briefly spoke in one video about the calf muscles & how they display something something something. lol I cannot find that video nor recall which video that you ever made with that info. Would be greatly appreciated if you could provide it in response. Thanks, M.Menard
I remember something like that when he said that the calf muscles are called the second heart and that it pushes the blood upwards when we move around, so that it relaxes us.
I’m not Joe, but feet reading helps. Not a pro at that but for the obvious things like pointed to door = wants to leave, not interested, out of time, etc. Maybe Joe will answer? I’d say the bottom half trumps, but for the eyes, perhaps? Good question!
Hey has been blinking a lot during the whole video, He could have either dry eyes or extremely watery eyes on this day! But like he explains there is no one nonverbal cue that can tell an interrogator anything, So in this case the fast rate eye blinking would be considered a baseline!