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Definition of a Gesture and Communicating Nothing

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Day 11 Topic 1

If you’re onstage, you’re communicating—even when you think you aren’t. A gesture isn’t only a hand wave; it’s any visible action with intention, timing, and shape: breath, a head twitch, a weight shift, a single step. And here’s the kicker: audiences make meaning out of all of it. Try to “say nothing,” and they’ll still read a story. That’s not woo; it’s Communication 101 and solid behavior science. Mind and Media

Why It Matters

Quick Demo (Do This Now)

  1. “Communicate nothing” test: Stand in front of someone, go neutral for 10 seconds, then ask what they thought you were communicating. Spoiler: they’ll ascribe intent. Repeat after a high, phrase-ending breath or a small jaw release—notice how those “micro-gestures” change their read. Mind and Media
  2. Word + stroke test: Say a single line. Add one precise gesture that lands on the stressed syllable. Ask the same person what changed. Most will report clearer meaning or stronger commitment. PubMed

The Core Definition of a Good Stage Gesture

A good Gesture = visible action with intention + timing + shape.
It includes the preparation (eyes/breath), Plan the landing (when the gesture lands on the most stressed syllable of the word or idea that matters most in the phrase) and the reset (how you put it away and return to ready).. If any piece is missing, the audience still reads it—but often as noise. Plan all three. Academia

How to Practice (10-Minute Drill)

  1. Pick your verbs (one per arrow/box): claim, invite, deny, soothe.
  2. Eyes first. Choose the target (partner, object, audience plane).
  3. One line, one gesture. Land the stroke on the stressed syllable; recover to neutral by the next pickup.
  4. 30-second video. Can a stranger guess your verb? If not, refine timing before size. (Speech–gesture alignment improves comprehension; bigger isn’t clearer—better-timed is.) PubMed

Common Mistakes

Assignment (Workbook Page)

Pro Tips (Coach Brain)


References (selected)

Bottom line: you can’t turn “meaning” off. So choose it. Align your gesture’s verb, timing, and end with the music’s arrows, and the story stops leaking.

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