
It is not the same as appearance.
Presence is energy. Like sound, it has a frequency and an amplitude. Like light, it has a wavelength. Presence is sensed; it is felt.
What does your presence feel like to others? How does it change according to context, mood, and other factors? When are you aware of it yourself, and how do you modulate it, if at all?
Whose presence do you crave? Who soothes, comforts, uplifts, encourages, and quiets you, simply by being with you? Whose presence do you carry even when you’re apart, because it helps? How do you do it? Whose presence do you avoid? Why? What do these people teach you about yourself?
How do I already presence well?
–I make eye contact; I shake hands enthusiastically. I’m relaxed, open, and friendly. I can have a conversation with practically anyone, as long as we share a language. I am comfortable with people in general, which makes people comfortable with me.
–I’m a fantastic hugger.
–“I’m mostly peace love and light, and a little go fuck yourself.” My friendly and open personality does not make me a pushover. I do not tolerate disrespect or abuse, of myself, my family, or my work teams. I call it out civilly and if the behavior continues, I consider carefully and end relationships without regret.
–I’m good at 看臉色 ‘kan lian se’ literally ‘seeing facial color’ in Chinese—meaning to attune to people’s nonverbal cues. I can adjust my posture, tone of voice, facial expressions, and language to match my counterparts.
–Most of the time I think I balance confidence/competence well with humility. Strong back, soft front. If this is how people experience me, then I’m happy.
How could I show up better?
–People have told me I come on too strong, that my energy is too high. I can be loud and animated. I gesticulate. I could do better sometimes attuning to my surroundings and toning it down as needed.
–In certain situations and with certain people, my confidence wobbles. I second guess myself and may come across as weak, unsure, unreliable. I can get tongue tied and flustered. This makes me easy to bully and manipulate. It happens much less frequently with age, but I still feel vulnerable to it sometimes. Deep breathing in the moment helps a lot, and also lengthening my spine.
How do we evaluate presence as a society, and what makes it good?
Smiling Strangers. “You’re so friendly, Cathy, you must be from the Midwest,” said the boy from the East Coast, just as I’m thinking people here look at me like I have two heads when I’m friendly. In Colorado, however, people still smile and say hi to perfect strangers in public. It just makes my day, really. Do these folks realize how much their smiles mean to me? To anybody? Do you yours?
The Helpers. Nurses. Social workers. Teachers. Therapists. Charity workers. Volunteers. Moms. Doctors. Who else, especially in your life right now? Come to think of it, is there any profession or work that could not be thought of as helping? We may not always be in a good mood. We are too often exhausted, spent; too many of us are burned out right now. And still, we show up. We help. At our best, when our presence connects us in sincere service, it makes us all better.
How can we be present better to one another collectively?
Love First. If we have any love in us, how can we pull it up and out, put it in front, and show up for ourselves and others leading with it? Easier said than done. And we won’t be able to do it all the time. Let’s try harder anyway, ya?
Attune and Differentiate. Know yourself. Honor yourself. Show up all you. We can each own all of our strengths, our optimal resonance frequencies, our brightest light. Stand up straight and strong. Then, decide which petals of our identity flower to lead with, discern the context and respond appropriately. This is not about hiding parts of ourselves, rather mindfully showing up to connect, however it works best for us and those around us.
Lead and follow by example: Amplify. When you get feedback that your presence helps someone, take the compliment graciously. When someone’s presence benefits you, let them know. Positive reinforcement–rewarding desired behaviors–is one of the most effective ways to help the behavior recur. Look out for the good, amplify it–the sound and the light.
Honest, mindful, authentic presence. How much better could everything be if we were to offer this more often to more people, ourselves included?
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