I had found this answer off of another question so the credit does not really go to me but the person that wrote this. Btw if you actually wrote this question down you could’ve found a answer without asking a question. Hope this helps
Answer:
She is very happy because her mother baked her cake exactly like she wanted
<span>I watched as she slid across the floor. She looked like a seal sliding from the tub to the radiator. The entire journey was about 10 feet, but it felt like it took around 10 minutes for her to make that slide. Head first she bonked into the radiator, still wet and slightly covered by soap, shampoo and the shower curtain trailing her like some cape. Map woman. Europe and Africa covering her more delicate bits as she slid. I stood there, unsure how to react. Should I pick her up? Do I laugh? Do I just sit there and try to calculate what exactly happen. I smiled while I wait for her reaction, which is a mixture of tears, laughter, and sheer embarrassment. I finally get the ability to laugh to the ridiculousness of her and this moment, sliding like a seal into the radiator. It was the most graceful thing I've ever seen her do.</span>
What story or book is this question referring to?
Paralanguage and silence are the critical aspects of nonverbal communication.
Paralanguage involves volume, pitch, speech and intonation, can be referred as cover term for body language, expressed consciously or unconsciously. It focuses on “what” and “how” we say it impacting other emotionally. Paralanguage helps in conveying the true meaning behind the words, to emphasize something to be remembered it can be done by modifying the tone and body language.
Silence as a nonverbal communication is highly underutilized. Silence in communication helps others to think, evaluate and capture the attention of others. as quoted by Leonardo da Vinci
- "Nothing strengthens authority so much as silence."