Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
I was called for jury duty once. Since I was a nurse the defense attorney dismissed me on that basis. The crime was domestic abuse. Apparently nurses know too much about domestic abuse for a defense attorney's liking.Christ, I hope you don't get pulled for jury service.
Believe it or not, some people are good at reading people's non verbal cues. It's part of my job and certainly part of my education. You have to be able to read a patient's nonverbal cues. It's a bit silly to think I should take everything a patient says to me verbally at face value and ignore my observation of their non-verbal behavior. By the same token, where would we be in taking a medical history if we never studied and quantified the non-verbal cues, and subsequently became able to teach this skill?
My education includes observing certain cues that indicate child abuse, for example. This is not a random skill one has or doesn't have. It is a skill where the behaviors are observed, quantified, verified as indeed being significant and then taught to medical professionals and others who need this skill.
So your assumption it is a stretch to assess non-verbal behavior is unfounded.