If I’m following your meaning, then that’s just hard in general. It’s easy to tell when someone’s throwing a punch as it happens, of course, but by that time it’s far too late to block or avoid; to get to it in time, you need to be able to see it in body alignment before it happens. And that’s not something we tend to get a lot of practice with in everyday life.
Whether reading body language is something that you practice in everyday life depends how your everyday life looks like.
Not bumping into other pairs while dancing Salsa on a crowded dancefloor needs the ability to read the body language to know where they will be. When it comes to experienced dancers who move fluently that works quite well. When you on the other hand dance next to a beginner who’s not dancing fluently you don’t know where they are going to be as easily and thing get much harder. Then it takes conscious effort to think about them.
Body language also matters for hugging other people. At least if you don’t have stickers. If I go for a hug, does the other person body language prepares for a hug or do the tense up? If they tense up, I stop the hug before it really happens and therefore I don’t invade the other person.
Then the nonfluent body language is probably explained by people trying to move in ways that are hard to read.
If I’m following your meaning, then that’s just hard in general. It’s easy to tell when someone’s throwing a punch as it happens, of course, but by that time it’s far too late to block or avoid; to get to it in time, you need to be able to see it in body alignment before it happens. And that’s not something we tend to get a lot of practice with in everyday life.
Whether reading body language is something that you practice in everyday life depends how your everyday life looks like.
Not bumping into other pairs while dancing Salsa on a crowded dancefloor needs the ability to read the body language to know where they will be. When it comes to experienced dancers who move fluently that works quite well. When you on the other hand dance next to a beginner who’s not dancing fluently you don’t know where they are going to be as easily and thing get much harder. Then it takes conscious effort to think about them.
Body language also matters for hugging other people. At least if you don’t have stickers. If I go for a hug, does the other person body language prepares for a hug or do the tense up? If they tense up, I stop the hug before it really happens and therefore I don’t invade the other person.