Write The Darn Book! Beat Writer’s Block, Strengthen Your Craft & Finally Finish Writing Your Book.
Body Language for Writers: How to Reveal Character Emotion, Secrets and Lies on the Page Writing Wednesday episodes explore the outer work of writing: craft, structure, revision, publishing, process, and the practical steps that help you finish your book. Body language is one of the most powerful tools you can use in your manuscript, especially when your characters are hiding something. A character can say, “I’m fine,” while their fingers keep worrying the edge of a napkin. They can smile at the detective while their feet angle toward the door. They can tell the truth in their words and still reveal the fear, guilt, longing, shame, or calculation moving beneath the surface. In this Writing Wednesday episode, we’re diving into body language for writers and how to use it to reveal emotion, deepen character, create subtext, and build tension in your scenes. This is more than a simple “show, don’t tell” technique. Used well, body language becomes story evidence. It lets the reader notice what your character is trying to hide, what they’re feeling beneath the dialogue, and what changes when another character sees the truth leaking through. Drawing on my eighteen years in policing and my fascination with human behaviour, we’ll look at how real-world behaviour awareness can help you write stronger, more layered scenes. We’ll also explore body language through the lens of baseline, context, clusters, contradiction, and consequence, so you can use physical cues with more precision rather than relying on random clenched jaws, crossed arms, or dramatic glances across the room. This episode will be especially useful if you write mystery, thriller, suspense, romantic suspense, crime, historical fiction, fantasy, memoir, or any story where characters carry secrets, hide their emotions, or say one thing while their body reveals another. In this episode, you’ll learn how to: * Use body language to reveal what your character feels before they say it out loud. * Create stronger subtext by showing the tension between words and physical behaviour. * Use body language as story evidence in mystery, thriller, suspense, romance, and emotionally charged scenes. * Understand why one isolated gesture rarely means much without baseline, context, and consequence. * Revise a scene so your character’s body reveals emotion, pressure, secrecy, attraction, fear, or desire without over-explaining it to the reader. We’ll also talk about why body language is so useful in everyday life and in writing. Once you start noticing how much people communicate before they speak, you begin to see your characters differently too. They stop feeling like people who simply deliver dialogue, and they start feeling like real human beings with bodies, instincts, defences, fears, secrets, and desires. Your practical tool for this week is the Body Language Scene Audit. You’ll choose one scene in your manuscript where a character is under emotional pressure, identify what is normal for that character, find the moment where the pressure changes, and revise one paragraph so the body reveals more than the narration explains. Because the body is often where the story leaks through. And as writers, we get to notice that, shape it, and place it on the page in a way that helps the reader feel the truth before anyone says it out loud. Free Masterclass Invitation If this episode has you thinking about how you naturally write emotion, dialogue, body language, tension, or scene detail, I’d love to invite you to my free masterclass, Write To Your Wiring, happening on Tuesday 30 June at 10:00am Sydney time, live on Zoom. In this 45-minute masterclass, we’ll look at how your natural NLP modality shapes the way you think, create, access story, and move through resistance at the page. Some writers see the scene first. Some hear the dialogue. Some feel the emotional truth in their body. Some need the logic and structure to click before the words can flow. Once you understand that about yourself, writing can begin to feel less like forcing and more like working with your own creative wiring. Save your free spot at: maddisonmichaels.com/masterclass ⭐️ If this episode resonated with you, I’d love for you to leave a five-star review on Apple or Spotify. It helps other writers find the show, and it means so much to know these episodes are supporting you as you write the darn book. 💗
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