How do you make use of the speaking
area? Do you hold forth just standing there like a wooden Indian? Or, equally
silly, do you pace back and forth like a caged tiger? The one strategy is as
mindless as the other. Be aware: the real estate of the stage is a vastly
valuable, and under-utilized, resource!
Instead, make your movement parallel the
organic development in your spoken content. So, why not try this? You're
telling a story to illustrate your point, and it's chronological. So start at
stage left at "when I was in diapers;" then move a few steps toward
the center at "I wasn't much better as a teenager;" and another few
steps for "Fast forward 15 years." [Be careful that you don’t move
back, say, to center stage unless you’re referring to your teenage years
again.] When your story is finished and it's time for "And here's my
point," MOVE FORWARD A FEW STEPS!
Your audience may not realize how you
did it but they'll be captivated - and all you did was tell the three
paragraphs of your story in three parts, each told from different points on an
imaginary straight left-to-right line, then you stepped forward from that line
to make your point. In other words, you will have made it easy for them,
literally, to follow you.
Get it?
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