Body language speaks: Love to wipe glasses means that you have no heart

Body language speaks: Love to wipe glasses means that you have no heart

Many years of research by the famous British body language masters Aaron Pease and Barbara Pease found that repeatedly taking off the glasses, wiping the lenses, or biting the temples of the glasses is usually to delay time, to help you sort out your ideas, and to be wiseDecide.

  Wearing glasses usually gives a hard-working, clever impression.

But when someone talks, they often take off their glasses and wipe their lenses. What’s the secret?

  Many years of research by the famous British body language masters Aaron Pease and Barbara Pease found that repeatedly taking off the glasses, wiping the lenses, or biting the temples of the glasses is usually to delay time, to help you sort out your ideas, and to be wiseDecide.
  When you are worried, nervous, or hesitant, you may feel uncomfortable, such as itching, on your face, and you may unconsciously take off your glasses to reduce discomfort.

In addition, when careful judgment is required, people always hope that they can “brighten their eyes”, while those who wear glasses usually behave as if they repeatedly wipe the spectacle lenses habitually, hoping to help themselves see the world in this way.

  Therefore, when dealing with a person’s personality, if the other party takes off his glasses and wipes his lenses, it means that he is at a loss, and I don’t know what to do.

At this point, you may wish to temporarily pause your personality and give the other party some time to think; or push the boat down the river and give him some good suggestions.