We’ve all heard the statistics: 93% of communication is non-verbal. But if that number feels abstract, Robert L. Whiteside’s classic work, Face Language , makes it terrifyingly (and wonderfully) concrete.
Originally published in the 1970s but still circulating widely as a scanned PDF in psychology and body language circles, Face Language is not your typical pop-psychology book. It is a field guide to the 3,000+ distinct expressions the human face can make. Having just finished a deep dive into the PDF version, here is why this forgotten gem deserves a spot on your digital bookshelf. Whiteside’s core argument is simple yet profound: The face does not just reflect emotion; it advertises intent. He moves beyond the basic "happy/sad/angry" model. According to Whiteside, every twitch of the orbicularis oculi (the muscle around your eye) or asymmetry of the lip tells a specific story. face language by robert l whiteside pdf
Blog Post by [Your Name]
He refers to the face as a "biosocial map." If you learn to read the map, you can predict behavior before it happens. Skimming the yellowed pages of the PDF scan, three major ideas stand out: We’ve all heard the statistics: 93% of communication