What is shyness?

I wrote this article several years ago, but shyness is such a powerful force in someone’s life, it’s worth repeating.  I’m talking about shyness all month leading up to this month’s webinar on the 28th. If you have a shy child, you need to be there!  Check it out here.

Spirit of Fear
By JoJo Tabares

For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.” -2 Timothy 1:7 KJV

Fear in speaking with others is timidity or what we call shyness.  According to Webster’s dictionary, shyness means “sensitive and hesitant in dealing with others”.  This is not the spirit of power that should be present inside the Christian for we know that with the Lord all things are possible and, if the Lord is for us, who can be against us?

Research shows that 87% of what we do all day is communication related.  Maybe that is why the Bible speaks about communication skills hundreds of times.  The Father gives each of us a mission in life and something to say that someone needs to hear.  He also tells us to go out and share the Good News.  God doesn’t say this lightly knowing that some are born with confidence and some are born with shyness!  He tells us this because He has put within each one of us the tools needed to stand up and share with His children each in our own way.

Many people mistakenly think that shyness is a character trait or a personality flaw.  It is not.  For the most part, it is the result of not being comfortable or experienced with certain aspects of communication for some period of time.  The longer a person has experienced himself as shy, the stronger its hold over him.  Communication is actually a set of skills that can be learned and must be practiced to reach mastery.  Anyone and everyone can learn them.  Not everyone will have the same aptitude, but all can learn to be comfortable and confident enough in order to complete the work the Lord has given them in their life!

The challenge is to find the appropriate key to unlock and let go of the shyness within.  I liken learning communication skills to swimming because the analogy is fairly accurate.  When teaching a young child to swim, a common technique is to throw them into the ocean or pool.  The child is supposed to use instincts to get to the other side as they are carefully watched over by their parent.  The idea is that when they get to the other side, they realize that they didn’t drown and actually accomplished the goal.  Unfortunately, that method works only about half the time!  The other half of the time it goes like this:  The child is petrified!  They are thrown into the water and panic sets in.  Instinctively they thrash about and somehow make it to the other side.  Instead of feeling relieved and excited that they accomplished their goal of swimming, they are now terrified of water and they vow never to do that again!

So it is with speech classes.  Some children run into my classes, sit in the front row and can’t wait to get up to speak!  The other half are kicked in by their parents, stand at the entrance wide-eyed resembling a deer in the headlights and sit down after some coaxing on my part.  What happens inside that first speech class is critical!  Will they feel comfortable enough to take more steps along the road to effective communication skills or will they grit their teeth and bear it making a solemn vow before God to avoid any further speaking opportunities that might come along?

The idea isn’t to get them through a speech class.  The goal is to create a more confident and powerful speaker who will have the spirit of power in the Lord!  To that end, I teach with humor.  It disarms the fear allowing them to forget that they expected it to be hard and scary.  I don’t throw them in the water.  Instead, I have them stick their big toe in, giving them a chance to acclimate their body to the water’s temperature.  This allows them to take baby steps further in the ocean we call communication.

Where did I get my training for this?  Some might think it was at California State University, Northridge where I got my degree in Speech Communication, but they would be wrong.  It was from a little girl who was terrified to speak- not only in public, but one on one.  It was that little girl who grew up lonely and afraid of so many things.  It was that painfully shy girl who missed out on so much.  She taught me a lot about what shy children need.  Many of my students thank me for the training she provided.  Her name?  JoJo.

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JoJo Tabares holds a degree in Speech Communication, but it is her humorous approach to communication skills which has made her a highly sought-after Christian speaker and writer.  Her articles appear in homeschool publications, such as Homeschool Enrichment Magazine and The Old Schoolhouse Magazine, which also endorses her Say What You Mean curricula.  You can also find JoJo on web sites such as Crosswalk.com and Dr.Laura.com.  For more information on communication FUNdamentals and Christian-based communication skills for the whole family, please visit http://www.ArtofEloquence.com

 

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Visual JoJoisms Day

Time for Friday Funnies!  Here are a few Visual JoJoisms to remind you how important communication skills really are:

And…

Finally…

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Women’s Business Webinar Tomorrow

You are losing customers daily…

because you are probably making the 15 Deadly Mistakes Women Make in Business!

Your customers will never tell you why they didn’t buy from you or why they didn’t come back to your site…but I will!

This webinar is like nothing you’ve seen!  You’ll get no fluff here. You’ll receive one hour packed with information from a proven expert that will transform your business.  Reserve your spot now and get my eBook, Say What You Mean When You’re in Business FREE!

Plus at the end of the webinar you will have access to the slide show with all of my notes so you won’t miss a thing.

For only a few dollars more than the cost of the eBook alone, you’ll get all three, but hurry. We will only be holding this webinar once, don’t be left out!

Click here to secure your spot now!

http://artofeloquence.com/webinar/

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Three Common Mistakes Women Make in Business

If you read my recent blog post called, “Would You Spend $997 for An Unexplained Product?” a few weeks ago, you know what sparked my excitement about bringing you this new series of webinars!  In a nutshell, most webinars spend 45 minutes telling you why the host is so great and only 15 minutes telling you what you came to hear.  My free seminars were never like that.  They were packed with information, but these new webinars are going to be even better.  Our new webinars are going to be simply INCREDIBLE!

Packed with solid information that will help you and your family communicate more effectively in business, in leadership positions and in your personal life, these webinars are going to have some exciting new features.

The old seminars were audio only and limited to 20 or 30 minutes. These new webinars will be 60 minutes and will also include a slide show presentation you will be able to download and keep for reference.  This first webinar will be given at an introductory rate and will include a free copy of my eBook, Say What You Mean When You’re in Business– a $19.95 value!

This month’s topic is 15 Common Mistakes Women Make in Business.  I’m going to share just a tidbit of a preview for you here on the blog today, but our newsletter subscribers will get an exclusive preview of the webinar so make sure you are subscribed before tomorrow!  The details are on the bottom of this blog post.

Women tend to have a more difficult time communicating that they are serious business owners and, instead, project an image that their business is more of a hobby.  Some of that has to do with society’s view of women and their role in the workforce and some of it is the way in which we are taught to communicate.

Men are taught to be aggressive while women are taught to be nurturing.  The difference in what we communicate can be incredible.  It can be the difference between being profitable and wasting our precious time.  Here are three tips that will help women entrepreneurs become more effective business owners.

1. Seek out leadership opportunities in your community or online.
Women tend to socialize well, but they don’t tend to network very well.  The skills are similar, but networking is like socializing with a purpose.  It’s that purpose that women tend to shy away from so they socialize up until the point where they are comfortable talking about their business and asking for leadership opportunities.

2. Be assertive.
That brings us to being assertive.  While being aggressive isn’t a good thing, no business owner, female or otherwise, will get very far if they are not assertive.  As we discussed in the first tip, women need to take the opportunities that present themselves in order to communicate that they are a leader in their field.

3. Remember that this is business not a hobby.
Too many women entrepreneurs tend to introduce themselves as a wife and mother…oh and I do scrap booking on the side.  That screams HOBBY!  Would you even consider seeing a physician who introduced himself as a husband and father and oh he does brain surgery on the side?  Speak about your business like it’s a business not as if it’s a hobby.

For more information on exactly how to apply these three (plus one more) of the fifteen mistakes  I’ll be teaching during the webinar, make sure you are subscribed to our newsletter before tomorrow!  I’ll be sharing details about four of the fifteen tips from the upcoming webinar…but ONLY with my newsletter subscribers so make sure you are a subscriber before Tuesday.  Also I’ll be sharing the link to the page where you can read more about the webinar and sign up to attend.

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The Great Communicator: The Early Years

Usually I have Friday Funnies on my blog, but in honor of the anniversary of Ronald Reagan’s death this week, I wanted to share a little known piece of his life: his childhood.  Note how his character was formed at an early age and how he began to train for his title, The Great Communicator.

 

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What is effective communication?

As it is Effective Communications Month, I thought I’d begin my series of blog articles with a reminder of what communication really is.  Here is an article I wrote a while back that puts it best.

Communication is a word you’ve probably heard since you were young, but I’ll bet you can’t define it. Some people think communication is talking, conversation, making a speech, persuading someone of something or badgering them into coming to church. Others think it’s manners, etiquette or social graces.

Merriam Webster defines communication as “an act or instance of transmitting,” “information transmitted or conveyed,” “a verbal or written message,” “exchange of information,” “personal rapport,” or their most comprehensive definition, “a process by which information is exchanged between individuals through a common system of symbols, signs, or behavior.”

Wikipedia has one of the most complete definitions of communication I have ever seen:

Communication is the activity of conveying information. Communication has been derived from the Latin word “communis”, meaning to share. Communication requires a sender, a message, and an intended recipient, although the receiver need not be present or aware of the sender’s intent to communicate at the time of communication; thus communication can occur across vast distances in time and space. Communication requires that the communicating parties share an area of communicative commonality. The communication process is complete once the receiver has understood the message of the sender.“

I know I was subtle by putting it in bold letters, but didja catch that last part? I’d go one step further. Effective communication is complete when the receiver has understood the message of the sender, the way in which the sender had intended.

True communication, effective communication requires that the listener understands the sender’s message in the spirit it was intended or the message is skewed, misunderstood and the relationship between the sender and receiver has changed or is damaged in some way.

Everyone talks, but not everyone truly communicates. Everyone gets a message across, but not everyone has the ability to relate his message so effectively that his listener understands his message as it was intended. Anyone can lecture, but not everyone can truly teach, enlighten. Manners will only get you so far in a relationship. A speech will not endear you to your neighbor. A presentation will not help you resolve a conflict with your brother. Social graces will not persuade a nation to elect the right candidate. Etiquette cannot help you share your faith. And the communication skills required for each of these activities are different.

Everyone learns to talk. Very few learn to communicate effectively. It isn’t because it’s a set of skills only important for lawyers and politicians. It’s because society fully understands when communication is done badly, but does not understand that the reason behind the conflicts, divorce, lost job opportunities, and failed businesses is most often an inability to effectively express the vision.

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JoJo’s C.O.M.M.U.N.I.C.A.T.I.O.N. Acrostic

I’ve been posting various acrostics the last few weeks. My first used scripture.  Monday’s used JoJoisms and Wednesday’s used other quotes from the rich and famous.  Today I thought I’d try my hand at a true acrostic.

Here goes…

Constantly
Opening your
Mouth and
Muttering
Useless
News and
Information is not effective
Communication, but it does
Account for a majority of
Tripe usually
Included in a politician’s
Oral elocution as it is his
Native tongue.

 

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How the Rich and Famous Spell Communication

Here is the third in my series on C.O.M.M.U.N.I.C.A.T.I.O.N.

 

Communication is the key to education, understanding and peace.” James Bryce

Of all of our inventions for mass communication, pictures still speak the most universally understood language.” -Walt Disney

Men and women belong to different species and communications between them is still in its infancy.” -Bill Cosby

Music is a very personal and emotional form of communication.” -Trevor Dunn

Unlike then, the mail stream of today has diminished by such things as e-mails and faxes and cell phones and text messages, largely electronic means of communication that replace mail.” -John M. McHugh

Never argue with a fool. Someone watching may not be able to tell the difference.” Unknown

If we are strong, our strength will speak for itself. If we are weak, words will be of no help.” -John Fitzgerald Kennedy

Communication is all anyone ever gets paid for ultimately…and if you cannot effectively communicate, you will pay…not get paid!” Doug Firebaugh

A leader must look and act the part if he is going to have the success needed for a proper command.”-General George Washington to his commanders

The difference between the right word and the almost right word is the difference between lightning and a lightning bug.” Mark Twain

If you propose to speak, always ask yourself, is it true, is it necessary, is it kind.” -Siddhārtha Gautama

One of them, for example, which will probably haunt me more than any other is the problem of communication.” -Georges Simenon

Now it is evident that a little insight into the customs of every people is necessary to insure a kindly communication; this, joined with patience and kindness, will seldom fail with the natives of the interior.” -Charles Sturt

 

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National Blame Someone Else Day

Yesterday was National Blame Someone Else Day.  Did you?  I mean, did you blame someone else for something?  If not, it’s not too late!  ROFL

People do it all the time, don’t they?  Did anyone ever do it to you?  Recently?  How about a service provider?  I remember having a local cable company in California that was incredibly inept.  It took them eight months to properly install our cable.  I should have known something was amiss right then.  Unfortunately, they were the only game in town.

Every time we’d call to report a problem, they would tell us it was our fault.  They once told us it was our fault that they didn’t install the equipment correctly!  After all, they couldn’t reach us by phone because they hadn’t installed it yet!

Sometimes the blame game is a communication tactic.  A survey done several years ago showed that less than half of people thought they communicated well. However, they thought only 29% of other people did!

Have you ever had someone blame you for something they did?  Share your personal or customer nonservice story here!

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Communication Lessons from Shakespeare-Revisited

I blogged about this some time ago.  While looking through my posts for another article, I found it and thought I’d share it again.  Enjoy!

While going through my email files, I found the following quote:

“Conversation should be pleasant without scurrility, witty without affectation, free without indecency, learned without conceitedness, novel without falsehood.” ~William Shakespeare

Shakespeare packs quite a lot into this one line and I thought it so profound that I wanted to dissect it to get the full impact of what he is saying here.

Shakespeare says that conversation should be pleasant without scurrility.  Scurrility is abusive language or a rude remark. This is quite unique today with the invention of electronic communication such as you are reading here.  More and more I see people who feel free or even justified to be rude just because they don’t have to look their victim in the eye as they do it.

Next he says conversation should be witty without affectation. Affectation means a speech that is not natural for you.  It is natural to want to put your best foot forward when we present ourselves to others but it is important that we don’t change who God made us to fit that bill.  I’m a goofball.  It comes naturally.  I goof around with language when I write and speak.  It’s natural for me.  If I were to try to be some Serious Sally, you might feel like I was putting on airs.  In fact, I have a story to tell you about that.

Way back when I first started writing communication studies, my husband was in charge of editing my work.  He doesn’t write the way I do.  He’s got a fabulous sense of humor, but he doesn’t write that way.  His style is more formal and polished.  After reading over his changes, I remember thinking it sounded like I swallowed a dictionary!  I took it back to him and said, “Lighten up, Francis!”  (from a line in a movie)

God gave each of us a unique perspective.  Nobody wants to read what you think someone else would say.  They want to know what YOU think.

Next Shakespeare says we should be free without indecency.  Free speech should not be so free that we compromise moral decency. Free speech has its consequences and one of them is that we have now become a society where anything goes, but very little is valuable.  It’s hard to draw that line in law, but most of us know when it’s been crossed.   Ephesians 4:29 tells us, “Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth, but that which is good to the use of edifying, that it may minister grace unto the hearers.”

For the past few weeks, I’ve been posting some fabulous videos of Christian comedians and I’ve noticed something.  It takes so much more talent and creativity to be funny without swearing and what results makes you laugh even more!

Next he talks about being learned without conceitedness.  Conversation should strive to be intelligent discussion without putting on those airs.  Anne Morrow Lindbergh said “Good communication is as stimulating as black coffee and just as hard to sleep after.”

Do you have someone in your life that you dread talking to?  Someone who either never says anything new or someone who is always talking about himself so that you get bored with the conversation?  Do you have someone in your life you just LOVE talking to?  Maybe this person is an elderly relative who always has such rich and interesting stories to tell about life in the last century.  Conversation can be dull or it can have you hanging on every word.  It’s up the the individual to give something interesting of himself and there is a fine line between giving of himself and giving himself.

Finally, Shakespeare talks about being novel without falsehood.  This goes along the same lines as the previous segment.  There are those for whom boredom breaks out of his mouth because he never interjects a novel idea into the conversation.  Then there are those who spin wild tales just to wow their audience who is fully aware that almost none of this fantastic tale is actually true.

I hope you enjoyed your Communication lessons from Shakespeare!  I now return you to your regularly scheduled era.

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