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Hi! Welcome to the Mikroteater
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and the beautiful Chat Noir.
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And right now,
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it’s all happening at a theater,
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because, people,
we're going to an audition!
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Follow me, and follow
the arrows, to the audition.
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Let's go.
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For the last 6 or 7 years,
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I've been developing
a new acting technique.
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And I've simply called it "EyeActing."
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It's based on the concept that
where you look in a room
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affects how you feel.
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OK, do you have sound?
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Not yet.
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Let me see. There.
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Now you have sound.
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You can put this there.
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It turns out that through new research,
and neurology,
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it turns out that where you look
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in a room affects how you feel.
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In other words, your gaze
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has a direct connection
to your subconscious.
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Tell me a little bit about Vera.
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Vera is,
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she is a girl who
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hasn't had it easy growing up.
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And together with five other girls,
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she has found herself a pack. She lives
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outside of normal society.
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She's pretty young.
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When you talk about Vera now,
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can you feel her anywhere in your body?
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In my mouth,
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- Yes, good.
- Here, very much.
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In your cheeks?
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Yes. Almost like I can't open my mouth.
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That's good.
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Now if you look at the line,
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a horizontal line
starting at the windows over there.
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Can you feel Vera
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strongest gazing to your left?
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Or in the middle?
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Or can you feel Vera
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when you gaze to your right side?
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On my left.
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On your left?
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Do you have an area, or a point?
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I have an area.
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You have an area.
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When we work with EyeActing,
it's helpful to use
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something called bilateral music.
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It’s a kind of music
that we listen to with earphones.
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And it alternates
between the left and right ear,
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and it helps the actor concentrate.
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When working on a scene,
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you always start with the body,
finding a point
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on what I call the line —
the horizon in your field of vision.
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Then, you find the point
that corresponds to
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how you feel in your body,
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and this activates the subconscious.
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Slowly,
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you shift your focus from the conscious
to the subconscious,
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and this allows the subconscious
to bring forth both emotions and physical behavior
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sometimes you can see that actor
undergo a total physical transformation.
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How old are you?
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- 15.
- 15?
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How is that?
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It's okay.
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It's okay to be 15?
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No.
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No?
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No.
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Tell me?
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- No.
- Tell me.
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No. I don’t want to talk about it.
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You don't want to tell me?
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Where do you feel being 15 in your body?
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In your cheek?
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- My jaw.
- In your jaw?
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Could you see if you could find
that point on the line
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that corresponds to
how you feel it
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in your jaw?
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I think it’s here.
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You think it’s there? Okay.
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Do you have the point or just the area?
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I have the point.
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You have the point. Yes. Good.
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I think so.
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Yes, that's good.
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Great.
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What do you feel?
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I feel nauseous, and angry.
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You’re nausesous and angry?
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Where are you nauseous and angry, Vera?
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All over.
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All over?
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All over me.
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All over you?
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Yes. Okay.
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The most intriguing aspect of EyeActing
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is its organic nature
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and the direct engagement
with the subconscious,
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revealing something
that is truly skinless.
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It's very vulnerable.
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When there was no one inside,
we went in.
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Klara approached the man
behind the counter
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and asked for some cigarettes.
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When he turned around,
we threw ourselves at him,
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me and Klara, we put a knife to his eye,
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and we took all the money in the cash register,
and some from the safe.
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And then we ran out.
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Okay.
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You want to take your headphones off?
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Just a response,
just an impulsive response.
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You don't have to
think much about it, or be smart
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or make it academic in anyway.
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Can you just...
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Exciting, new, different, strange.
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Overwhelming.
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It was an extreme force,
and I still feel it.
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I still feel it.
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But do you think this is
deeper than the Method?
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Yes. It really gets into your muscle.
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I can't explain it any other way.
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I don’t know if you could feel
when you got into being 15 years old
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you became very obstinate.
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Oh fuck.
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Could you feel that?
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We could hear it.
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- What?
- I could hear it.
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You answered a bit rudely and...
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She was rude and it was perfectly fine.
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There was no problem.
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but, “No, I don’t want to,”
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“No, I don’t want to talk about it,”
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“No, I didn’t want to go there."
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- Did you feel that?
- Yes.
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Do you remember?
Do you have a sense of doing that?
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Yes, I remember. And I remember
how surprised I was at my own answer.
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Then again it was a little bit like,
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the best I can explain it is muscle memory,
like, I don’t care.
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I won't take this.
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This attitude just came up -
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pretend you don't care.
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Right, right.
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Why should I waste my time on this.
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- No?
- Yes.
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The big difference between EyeActing
and traditional Stanislavsky techniques
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I believe, is working on
what we call the analysis.
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We're used to doing
the analysis beforehand,
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usually sitting around a table
before we get up on our feet.
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The challenge with that is
when we work on the analysis,
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we're using the cognitive
part of our brain,
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the upper part responsible
for thoughts and words.
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But what EyeActing does
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is to go directly to the subconscious.
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The subconscious then
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sends electrical signals
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back up to the cognitive part,
which are then expressed theatrically.
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In other words,
when you work with the analysis,
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you're moving in the wrong direction
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compared to the flow
of electrical signals in the brain.
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This is why I believe
there are a lot of actors
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who find it difficult to transition
from working on the analysis
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into being in the zone.
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What I call the "flow zone" is the condition
when the actor is just living on stage.
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Yes, yes, very exciting.
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It was almost a coincidence
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that I stumbled upon this technique.
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Because I had heard
about a workshop in Oslo
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centered around a groundbreaking
new treatment method.
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And during the break, I started talking
with the workshop leader, David Grand.
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David Grand had developed
the Brainspotting technique,
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which is a treatment method.
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When he heard that I worked
with theater and acting training,
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he became quite excited
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and said, "You have to remember
that this technique
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can also bring out
characters from inside of us.”
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Wow, that’s exciting!
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What Brainspotting does is
it accesses the parts of the brain
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that go into character immediately.
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You don't have to have all the experiences
a character has had to use Brainspotting.
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We have a vivid ability to imagine.
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We have mirroring neurons that are active,
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and they can be activated even more
if we can feel it in our bodies.
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If we can feel the experience in our body,
we get an even deeper access
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to these experiences
when we use Brainspotting.
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Understanding Brainspotting
as a method of acting coaching
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you need to know
what it does in the brain.
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And just a quick brain education,
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the top part of the brain which is
the human brain, only humans have it,
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is called the neocortex.
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Underneath it is the mammalian brain
and the reptilian brain.
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And we call it the sub cortex.
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Language and thought is up here.
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Emotion and intuition and
and body experience is down here.
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Brainspotting uses eye positions.
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We really look for
relevant eye positions in a person.
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So when the actor finds that spot
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and all of a sudden, "Wow,
I'm right there,"
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and they start to drop down
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and they start to
have character memory come up
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and they feel it in their body
and they feel it emotionally,
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it's very active,
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but it also feels very safe
to the actor.
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When the actor finds that spot,
they're home.
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