Mindreader Find out what people really think, what they really want, and who they really are

David J. Lieberman

Book - 2022

"The leading lie-detection instructor to the FBI and other security agencies for over two decades, David Lieberman, PhD, takes "people reading" to a whole new level. Drawing on the latest research in psycholinguistics-the vital cues embedded in spoken and written speech patterns--Mindreader delivers proven, cutting-edge methods useful for countless real life applications, including: Learning to detect the messaging behind passive and indirect language, personal or impersonal descriptions, and the levels of detail someone is willing to share. Quickly determining whether someone's account of any incident or experience is the absolute truth or a work of complete fiction. Finding out whether a potential hire, a blind date, o...r the new babysitter is trustworthy or hiding something. Nobody wants to be played a fool. Mindreader will save readers time, energy, and heartache by identifying who can be trusted, and who is out to get them"--

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Subjects
Genres
Self-help publications
Published
New York : Rodale [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
David J. Lieberman (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xiv, 220 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 197-218).
ISBN
9780593236185
  • Introduction
  • Part I. Subconscious Reveals
  • Chapter 1. What They Really Think
  • Discover what someone really thinks-even thoughts that lie deep in their subconscious mind-no matter what they say or do.
  • Chapter 2. How a Person Sees and Feels about Other People
  • Find out how a person really feels about those in their life-whom they feel close to, whom they admire, and whom they secretly despise.
  • Chapter 3. Close Encounters
  • Learn how to tell if any conversation, interaction, or new relationship is going your way or the other way. Is the other person just being polite, or are they genuinely interested and engaged?
  • Chapter 4. Relationship Status and Power
  • Who is holding all the cards? Regardless of what anyone claims, you'll know whether a person feels in control or insecure within any relationship.
  • Chapter 5. Reading the Mood
  • Feelings of anger and anxiety leak out through seemingly kind and benign language and gestures. Decode the signs of hidden emotions to know what people are feeling, despite how they appear.
  • Part II. The Human Lie Detector
  • Chapter 6. Assessing Honesty and Integrity
  • Whenever you're speaking with a suspect, coworker, or new acquaintance, find out if they're going to be open and honest, or guarded and deceitful.
  • Chapter 7. The Art of Reading the Bluff
  • They make a threat, to walk out or to sue; they make a claim, to expose you or to protect you. Instantly know if they are just blowing smoke out of desperation or making a declaration of true intention.
  • Chapter 8. Making Up Stories: Alibis and Lullabies
  • Quickly determine whether someone's account of any incident or experience is the absolute truth or nothing but a complete work of fiction.
  • Chapter 9. Tricks of the Trade
  • See through the psychological tactics used by master manipulators and con artists to get rational people to behave in utterly irrational ways.
  • Part III. Taking a Psychological Snapshot
  • Chapter 10. A Peek into Personality and Mental Health
  • Find out whether anyone you meet-a potential hire, blind date, or new babysitter-has an easygoing and agreeable nature or is a force of nature just waiting to be unleashed.
  • Chapter 11. Narrative Identity: Reading Hearts and Souls
  • We all have a narrative that explains "who I am and why I am." Because human beings don't easily go off-script, once you know their story, you'll not only know what they're thinking, but you'll also be able to predict what they'll do next.
  • Chapter 12. Activating the Defense Grid
  • When we take notice of how people see themselves and their world-what attracts their attention and what they avoid; what they mention and what they miss; what they accept and what they reject-we know their strengths, insecurities, and struggles.
  • Chapter 13. The Meaning of Values
  • The values that we hold announce to the world what matters to us most and paint a picture of our deepest selves. Pierce anyone's public persona and you'll know what makes them tick.
  • Chapter 14. The Resilience Factor
  • When a person is under pressure or dealing with stress, learn how to tell who will bend and who will break-and how to spot cracks before they even appear.
  • Part IV. Building a Psychological Profile
  • Chapter 15. In Search of Sanity
  • People who suffer from emotional illness share common language patterns, which broadcast their perceptions of reality. Learn all about a person's inner world in a single conversation.
  • Chapter 16. The Psychology of Self-Esteem
  • Uncover the myth of the self-loving narcissist and find out how to tell who has self-esteem and who suffers from a deep-seated feeling of inferiority and self-hatred.
  • Chapter 17. Unmasking Personality Disorders
  • Discover why some people push your buttons and your boundaries-and why you too often let them. More importantly, know how to spot any personality disorder type, including the well-hidden and polished sociopath.
  • Chapter 18. Reflections of Relationships
  • Whether you're working with a patient, interviewing a potential hire, or making small talk with a colleague, detect the dead giveaways of mental illness in minutes.
  • Chapter 19. Highs and Lows and Suffering in Between
  • Some people put on a brave front. Learn how to tell who really has it all together and who may be suffering silently on the inside.
  • Chapter 20. When to Worry: Red Alert and Warning Signs
  • People don't just snap. Identify the advance warning signs for those who are poised to become a danger to themselves or to others.
  • Conclusion: What to Do with What You Know
  • Notes
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This perceptive volume by psychotherapist Lieberman (Never Get Angry Again) imparts techniques to better understand the thoughts, motivations, and emotions of others. He draws on his psychology background to offer pointers on decoding someone's values, mental health, honesty, and hidden emotions, and asserts that the order in which someone talks about others can reveal their true feelings. For example, Lieberman recounts catching up with a friend who paraded numerous photos of his dog before briefly showing two of his kids, suggesting his friend had a complicated relationship with his children that he didn't want to dwell on. Examining how others react to challenges can indicate their general outlook, the author contends, noting that those who make such remarks as "everything is ruined" tend to have poor mental health because they think in absolutist terms that view setbacks as indicative of complete failure. Lieberman also discusses how to spot a lie, positing that those with something to hide might angle their bodies toward the exit or give long-winded defenses against accusations. The author doesn't provide much research to support his claims, but readers will find his straightforward explanations logical and reasonable. This accessible pop psychology volume makes for a solid primer on getting into other people's heads. (Aug.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The latest from the veteran psychotherapist and author of Get Anyone To Do Anything and Never Be Lied to Again. Readers will perk up at Lieberman's claim to offer "near-telepathic" techniques to reveal what people think and detect lies. "You will be privy to what lies deep in their subconscious mind," he writes, "even when they themselves may be in denial and unwilling (or unable) to confront their thoughts, feelings, and fears on a conscious level." The author is well versed in the latest advances in psycholinguistics and neurophysiology, but no mind reading miracles appear. Nonetheless, Lieberman is a fine writer, so readers searching for sensible clues that someone might be deceiving them will receive a solid education along with sporadic warnings not to rely on a single tactic. Despite a deep understanding of human psychology and the occasional caution, Lieberman hints but never stresses that no perfect lie detector (human or electronic) exists--not even one that is 95% effective. The best human lie detectors--interrogation experts with the police, military, CIA, FBI, etc.--regularly indict innocent suspects, and criminology gurus who proclaim techniques for ferreting out the guilty are almost always debunked. Near the halfway point of the text, Lieberman changes course, eschewing clues for winning at poker in favor of an excellent primer on healthy versus pathological human behavior. Perhaps most intriguing is the author's explanation of the contrast between self-esteem and egotism, qualities that seem similar but are inversely related. Individuals with self-esteem like themselves, so they don't require respect from others to feel worthy. As self-esteem declines, egotism assumes power to defend against a presumably hostile world--or at least to make excuses. Egotists seem powerful, but the opposite is true: "It's the insecure person who has to tell us how confident he is--because that's the only way we're going to find out." Good clues for detecting lies but better insights into human nature. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 What They Really Think By paying close attention not only to what people say but also to how they say it--­their language pattern and sentence structure--­you can figure out what's really going on inside their head. To demonstrate how this works, we begin with a quick and painless grammar lesson. A personal pronoun, in the grammatical sense, is associated with a certain individual or group of individuals. It can be subjective, objective, or possessive, depending on usage. Grammatically speaking, when discussing a person or persons, there are three separate perspectives: * First person (i.e., I, me, my, and mine or we, us, our, and ours) * Second person (i.e., you, your, and yours) * Third person (i.e., he, him, and his; she, her, and hers; and they, them, and theirs) On the surface, it might seem as if pronouns simply replace nouns so that people don't have to repeat the same words over and again. "John lost John's wallet somewhere in John's house" is not exactly an elegant sentence. "John lost his wallet somewhere in his house" just sounds better. But from a psycholinguistic standpoint, pronouns can reveal whether someone is trying to distance or altogether separate himself from his words. In much the same way that an unsophisticated liar might look away from you because eye contact increases intimacy and a person who is lying often feels a degree of guilt, a person making an untrue statement often seeks to subconsciously distance himself from his own words. The personal pronouns (e.g., I, me, mine, and my) indicate that a person is committed to and confident about his statement. Omitting personal pronouns from the action may signal someone's reluctance to accept ownership of his words. Let's take the everyday example of giving a compliment. A woman who believes what she's saying is more likely to use a personal pronoun--­for instance, "I really liked your presentation," or "I loved what you said in the meeting." However, a person offering insincere flattery might choose to say "Nice presentation" or "Looks like you did a lot of research." In the second case, she has removed herself from the equation entirely. Those in law enforcement are well acquainted with this principle and recognize when people are filing a false report about their car being stolen because they typically refer to it as "the car" or "that car" and not "my car" or "our car." Of course, you can't gauge a person's honesty by a single sentence, but it's the first clue. A Distant Second Even when a personal pronoun is present, a switch from active to passive voice may signify a lack of sincerity. The active voice is stronger and more directly interactive, revealing that the subject--­the person or the people, in our examples--­performs the action of the verb in the sentence. With the passive voice, the subject is acted upon by some other entity. For example, "I gave her the pen" is in active voice, while "The pen was given to her by me" uses passive voice. Notice the shift in phrasing and how it subtly decreases the speaker's personal responsibility. To wit, let's say that two siblings are playing, and the younger one starts to cry. Most of the time, when mom or dad asks what's going on, the reason the child is crying--­as stated by the other child--­is because "he fell," "she got hurt," or "he banged his head." A child rarely says, "I did (action A) that caused (consequence B)." Indeed, it's unusual for a child (the egocentric beings that they are) to assume responsibility and declare: "I pushed him into the wall, and he hit his head," or "I should have been more careful when she climbed on my back." Let's look at this in another context. In a study titled "Words That Cost You the Job Interview," researchers assessed the interview language of hundreds of thousands of real-­life job candidates. Based on language patterns alone, they successfully divided these candidates into low and high performers.1 Here's what they found: * High-­performer answers contain roughly 60 percent more first-­person pronouns (e.g., I, me, we). * Low-­performer answers contain about 400 percent more second-­person pronouns (e.g., you, your). * Low-­performer answers contain about 90 percent more third-­person pronouns (e.g., he, she, they). High performers put themselves front and center in the action because they can call upon actual experiences. Low performers don't. They can't. They are more likely to give abstract or hypothetical answers, because they lack real-­world experience and success.2 High-­performer language: "I call my customers every month to see how they're doing." Or "I made two hundred calls every day at ABC Corp." Low-­performer language: "Customers should be contacted regularly." Or "You [or one] should always call the customer and ask them to share . . ." When you take yourself out of the proverbial action, you send a concealed message (possibly even from yourself). Ask a child about her first day at camp, and note how the same summation reveals two different impressions of her experience: the first, more enthusiastic and the second, lackluster: Response A: "I ate breakfast, then we went over to the park to play on the swings until I got to go swimming." Response B: "First, it was breakfast, then they moved us over to the park to play on the swings until they sent us to the swimming pool." The use of the passive tense or the absence of a pronoun also softens a message that may be ill received or confrontational. For example, one might excitedly proclaim, "We won the game!" but not "The game was won [by us]" because the active voice with a personal pronoun conveys solidarity with the message, thus invoking an assumption of pleasure and pride. Likewise, politicians tend to phrase reluctant admissions or apologies to dilute direct responsibility, including such gems as "Mistakes were made," "The truth had some deficits," and "The people deserve better." The phraseology also hints to the character of the speaker. When your tailor informs you that "I made a mistake on your hem," rather than, "A mistake was made," we can surmise that he operates with a greater degree of honesty and integrity.3 The Great Divide Distancing language assumes many shapes and sizes. Take a look at the following pairs of phrases and ask yourself which ones strike the chord of greater authenticity. "I stand in awe" versus "I'm in awe." "I find myself filled with pride" versus "I am so proud." "I, for one, am glad" versus "I'm so glad." "I am a great admirer" versus "I greatly admire." The first phrasings are all attempts to imprint the message with an emotional intensity but fail in convincing the keen observer because of two linguistic giveaways. First, a heightened emotional state is associated with a simplified grammatical structure, not the more florid ones. Sincere, emotionally laden sentences are short and to the point. Think: "Help!" or "I love you." Second, the speaker creates a separation between himself (the "I") and the emotional sentiment. Which of these statements sounds more believable? Statement A: "I'm so grateful that my wife was found alive. I'm indebted to all of the rescue workers." Statement B: "I, for one, am so grateful that my wife was found alive. I find myself indebted to all of the rescue workers." Statement A resonates as heartfelt while Statement B feels like a PR release. The second statement is not worrisome if the speaker has had time to compose himself and his thoughts. However, an impromptu, emotionally charged situation should exhibit a language pattern more consistent with Statement A. At such times, clichés and metaphors are also highly suspect. A person using them in an attempt to portray himself as impassioned is trying to economically convey an emotion that is not real. Manufacturing emotion takes lot of mental energy, so the person uses borrowed phrases. For example, ask any trauma victim about what happened, and you will not get a Nietzschean quote such as "To live is to suffer; to survive is to find some meaning in the suffering" or a cliché such as "That's the way the cookie crumbles." Certainly, with the passage of time and a shift in perspective, we may adopt a more philosophical view. Yet no one will ever convey an emotionally charged encounter by reciting the latest Pinterest quote on the beauty of suffering. Likewise, if someone proffers that a traumatic experience is "indelibly in my amygdala" (emotional memories are stored in this part of the brain), it reeks of inauthenticity. There needs to be emotional congruence. Excerpted from Mindreader: The New Science of Deciphering What People Really Think, What They Really Want, and Who They Really Are by David J. Lieberman All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.