This dating guru will fix your worst habits.
Illustration by Mark Stamaty.
“People feel weird when they meet me,” 27-year-old Blake Eastman tells me. He’s perched on a coffee table eating gummy bears.
Sitting across from him on the couch in an expansive,
hardwood-floored rental space in Chelsea getting ready to watch him
teach “The Dating Workshop,” I admit that I feel, if not
“weird,” a bit self-conscious. It’s hard to meet a master of body
language (or, to quote Eastman, “nonverbal communication”) and not worry
about what you’re doing with your hands, how solid your eye contact is,
and whether he’s reading your mind. Hint: He sort of is.
For eight months, Eastman has been teaching singles on the dating
scene to read minds, too, and to use their bodies to send clear signals.
For example, you can send the message, “If you touch me, I will gag,”
by slowly moving away each time your date invades your personal space.
Or you can communicate, “Kiss me! Now!” by playing with the buttons on
his shirt, looking at his lips, or softening the tone of your voice just
so.
Those moves might sound primitive, but on a first or second date,
it’s difficult to say exactly what you’re thinking. Most people opt not
to. Eastman’s theory is that if you’re not fluent in body language,
you’re likely to give your date the wrong idea, to inadvertently act
uninterested when you’re interested or vice versa, to be left mystified
by someone’s vanishing act, even though he was telling you the whole
time—wordlessly, of course—that he couldn’t wait to get away. Modern
dating is one big (quoting Led Zeppelin here) communication breakdown.
But The Dating Workshop and Eastman’s other classes, including Body
Language Explained and Deception Detected, are designed to help.
“I promise you,” says Eastman, who has a blue-eyed baby face but
speaks with the quick cadence of an Aaron Sorkin character, “in about a
year and a half, my name will be synonymous with body language.”
Arguably, the writer Neil Strauss has a corner on that market. His 2005 runaway best-seller, The Game,
told the story of the years he spent with professional pickup artists
learning how to seduce women. Much of Strauss’ strategy entailed
nonverbally conveying self-confidence. Eastman, however, didn’t come to
the study of body language to get laid. He says he developed his
proficiency in nonverbal communication during childhood as an adaptive
response to his anxiety. In social situations, he often found himself
paralyzed, imagining worst-case scenarios about what would happen if he
made the wrong move or said the wrong thing. So he learned to read
people to discern what they wanted from him. Years later, he obtained a
master’s degree in forensics from John Jay College of Criminal Justice,
started teaching psychology classes at LaGuardia Community College, and
became a professional poker player. He uses his winnings to fund his own
research in nonverbal communication, conducting countless hands-on
hours in the field.
Some of his lab settings are cocktail parties; he sets them up, films
them, and then studies the footage. In the summertime, he stands
between two mailboxes across from the outdoor tables of Blue Water
Grill, a seafood restaurant in Manhattan’s Union Square, observes people
on dates, and collects data. He shares his findings through The Nonverbal Group,
the research and teaching company he founded and runs. In his rental
space, he maintains an office—a desk and computer, shelves full of body
language and pop-psychology texts including The Brain In Love, Who’s In Charge?,
and a couple of books by Malcolm Gladwell (“who I fucking love to
death”)—as well as a seminar room where he’s taught more than 2,600
students in the past year.
Eastman tells me that The Dating Workshop usually draws more women
than men. But when the room fills up, the crowd is about 50/50, the
majority in their 20s and 30s and got tickets to the class through
Groupon and LivingSocial. The women have nervous eyes and adjust their
tights; the men look like computer programmers with their straight
backs, solemn expressions, and wire-rimmed glasses. To begin, Eastman
asks his students to shout out questions and writes them on a white
board.
“I can feel people making assumptions about me,” says a guy in the
back row who wears a blazer over a plaid shirt. He asks Eastman for
advice on changing that. “Like, I tell people I went to Harvard, and I
can tell they’re thinking I’m a douche bag.”
Eastman nods, watching him for a moment. He tips his head and
squints. “Well, you do have a little douche baggery to you,” he says.
The room, including the Harvard graduate, erupts into laughter. “We’ll
work on that,” he adds. (Later, he tells me that the “douche baggery” he
picked up on stemmed from a disconnect between the arrogance in the
Harvard graduate’s words and the insecurity apparent in his body
language.)
“What about the nice guy theorem?” asks another man. “Nice guys finish last.”
“Not true,” Eastman says. “Those are just nice guys who don’t know how to market themselves.”
He continues to take questions until he runs out of space on the white board. Then he sets about answering them.
“What’s cool in the world of dating,” he tells the group, “is that no
one’s ever telling you how they feel. They’re showing you.” He
introduces “the orientation reflex.” That’s the move a person makes to
orient toward what interests him—turning his head, for example. He
insists that people orient toward us all the time, and we should learn
to notice it. He talks about “pacifying gestures” we use to diffuse the
anxiety of dating, how men rub their palms on their pants and women play
with their fingers. He explains that many people do poorly on dates
because they’re “emotionally incongruent”: What comes out of their
mouths doesn’t match what shows on their faces.
He uses President Obama as an example: “During the debates, he’d say,
‘Mitt, I disagree with you,’ ” Eastman says, making a placid face.
“Not, ‘Mitt! I disagree with you!’ ” Eastman says, changing his
expression to an angry one. In that case, he explains, Obama came off
as weaker than he meant to. But emotionally incongruent people can also
come off as odd, and that can hurt them on dates.
So if they’re doing so many things wrong, how can discouraged daters
improve their skills? “Video,” Eastman says. “You watch yourself on
tape. Then you can change.” It might be a creepy move to set up a video
camera on a first date, but Eastman will approximate the experience for
you in his workshop by filming you talking to your classmates.
After the first hour, Eastman tells his students to get up and
mingle. Everyone stands and starts moving around the room, wearing
I-can’t-believe-we’re-all-sober smiles. I talk with one woman, an
actress in her early 30s who grew up in Virginia and feels mystified by
New York men. “Southern men are so different,” she says. “Here, I’m
confused. I’m always horrible on the first couple of dates.” She’s taken
two of Eastman’s classes with a LivingSocial coupon, and she believes
they’ve made her more aware. She feels more comfortable and less
compelled than she used to be to fill every moment of silence on a date.
I talk with a computer programmer (I knew it!) who is here for the
first time and says he’s benefiting from the class. “I don’t agree with
everything Blake says. But he’s good.” I talk with another woman who
says that meeting Eastman and his girlfriend has changed her whole life.
She has new friends, a new job, a new outlook. She wears the dreamy
gaze of a cult member. I meet another man who has taken a few of
Eastman’s classes and seems similarly enamored. “He’s just so amazing,”
he says.
After living in New York City for six years, I’ve met (sometimes as a
seeker, more often as a journalist) my share of self-help gurus: diet
experts, sex coaches, life coaches, career coaches, a man who believes
he can make anyone a millionaire, an older woman who wants to fill up
Madison Square Garden with young women and preach against premarital
sex, an angry meditation teacher who demands $2,500 for meditation
classes. And all of them, even the angry meditation teacher, have
disciples—people who think this guru must be the path to happiness; on
the guru’s website, they’ll write testimonials: I don’t know where I’d be without him.
But Eastman seems far more sweet than parasitic: While we were
waiting for his students to arrive, he gushed about his girlfriend, whom
he met in one of his classes. “Most people don’t communicate,” he says.
“My girlfriend and I are completely transparent. We have the best
relationship I’ve ever seen.” He talked about how great his friends are,
how supportive his parents are. When I asked him what learning
nonverbal communication has done for him, he answered, “I don’t know
where I’d be without it.” Eastman doesn’t give the impression that he
aims to gather admirers but rather that he yearns to help people feel as
comfortable as he’s learned to feel. “Communication is the most
important part of relationships,” he says. “I want people to learn to
communicate.”
Later in the night, the group engages in a second mingle. This time,
they seem more relaxed. Still, Eastman has tips: “You were playing with
your fingers behind your back,” he tells someone.
“And you,” he tells another student, “have a low blink rate. Guess
who else has that? Me. And you know what happens if you stare at people
without blinking? They’re gonna think you’re creepy.”
And then, some advice we could all use: “You look upset,” he tells
one of the computer-programmer types. “Come on!” he says with a smile.
“Relax.”
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