Fortune Telling Collection - Horoscope - How to tell a person's character from the way he walks?

How to tell a person's character from the way he walks?

Generally speaking, people who walk with their heads held high and their heads held high, or with their hands behind their backs, show that they have a strong sense of superiority and arrogance. People who walk fast and swing their arms naturally often have firm goals and pursue positivity. People who are used to putting their hands in their pockets, even if the weather is warm. I often have a self-righteous problem and like to comment on others or things. When a depressed person walks, he often unconsciously puts his hand in his pocket, drags his feet, rarely looks up and pays little attention to where he is going. If a person is absorbed, the pace of walking will become slow, and he may stop and accidentally kick the broken bricks and sundries on the ground.

A person who is honest or friendly to others often unbuttons his coat or even takes it off in front of others. In business negotiation, when the other party starts to take off his coat and put it on the back of the chair and the armrest, it can be inferred that he has the sincerity to continue the conversation and hopes to reach an agreement. On the contrary, when the other person finds the problem difficult, or the two sides are lovers, he will not take off his coat despite the rising temperature.

When the teacher is in class or the leader is speaking, if the audience leans forward, leans his head slightly and holds it with one hand, it means that he is listening attentively. For example, most of the audience don't tilt their heads, their backs are straight and their faces are listless. Sometimes they look at the ceiling, sometimes they look out of the window, sometimes they look at their watches, and even they are packing things, such as inserting pens and closing notebooks, which shows that they are bored and want to dissolve immediately.

Grasping the chin is a common thinking gesture on the eve of decision-making Referring to this thinking posture, Darwin said that it can be seen all over the world that people "sometimes scratch their beards while thinking ... and their hands, usually thumb and forefinger, touch their faces, and most commonly touch their upper lips with their fingers."