Editing Your Roll (Say More With Less.)
When I hear too much chatter; too much background; too much “filler” , it makes me nervous.

I think we’ve all been in the audience of someone who just…..rambles. Talks endlessly. And uses far too many words to get their idea across.
They almost take the oxygen out of the room.
As I stand there, watching them speak, I’m pondering about the relentless hamster wheel that must be turning in their heads that drives that kind of non-stop, free-flowing talk. It’s not a content, calm, organized space for them to be in — or me, as the listener.
When I coach yoga teachers on how to more effectively speak while teaching their classes, one of the components I drive home is to edit their roll. Use only twenty words to effectively get your point across instead of the 50+ you used to use. To say more with less.
I find that I tune out an onslaught of words; they become like white noise if there’s an seemingly never-ending deluge of words; they can be relaxing, but I don’t focus on the content or allow what’s being said to sink in, if it’s a constant monologue. Even if I know that what’s being said is likely something I could benefit from. It’s more like a radio or TV station you have on in the background. It’s there, but you’re not absorbing any of it. It’s just noise. If my brain perceives the words as part of a non-stop “shower” of content, it categorizes as a pleasant background noise.
An e conomy of words is an aspect that I teach in my workshops, and I often quote the famous John Wayne saying: “Talk low, talk slow, and don’t say too much.”
My own personal style is to only tell what needs to be told; I try not to talk too much about myself, and I will defer to others to “take the floor”. That’s just me. I also have lots of outlets (speaking professionally as a voice artist, and blogging endlessly — both on this forum and my my main career blogspace on theivrvoice.com) — that I don’t feel the need to let a lot of content burst forth. The valve on my pressure cooker of words is released regularly and often. For others, it isn’t.
In the context of teaching yoga, it benefits you to think about not “crowding” the airspace with too much verbiage. There’s a lot of power and impact in spaces, in pauses, and in the “unsold real estate” of pure, intentional quiet. Words carry extra meaning when they emerge — freestanding — in a sea of silence. As students, we hang on every word when they’re interspersed; when they’re loaded with meaning *because* they are selective.
Think about creating a significant “wordspace”. Ponder the impact that words can have when they are selected carefully, metered, and meaningful. Distill your ideas into economical “sets” and disperse them with intention and deliberateness. Don’t be afraid of pauses, or of the idea that you’re going to “lose us” if you pause with intention. Be aware of any tendency you may have to ramble or to “fill” the atmosphere with a steady stream of words. The gravity of your words will intensify, and your words — if carefully doled out — have the potential to carry vast amounts of weight and meaning due to their scarcity.
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