When we recognize the role of transitions in life, we better understand their power in speaking.
Fall is a time of transitions. Moving from one season to another, our weather transitions from warmer to cooler temperatures, and leaves on trees change from green to red, yellow, and orange due to shorter days.
Having been through several life transitions – a move and a loss of a loved one, I tend to think of life transitions like bridges: they honor what came before while guiding us to what comes next. Without them, people feel lost; with them, people feel oriented.
That’s exactly what transitions do in a speech and why we should care about how we use them.
Here are a few examples of how life transitions are related to speech transitions.
5 ways transitions connect both life and language:
1. Moves and Relocation
- Life transition: Moving to a new home or city requires leaving one place behind and orienting yourself in a new one.
- Speech transition: A transition signals you’re leaving one “home” idea and moving toward a new one, helping your audience pack up the old point and settle into the new one.
- Language metaphor: “Now that we’ve unpacked this first idea, let’s move into the next room of our message.”
2. Loss and Letting Go
- Life transition: Losing a loved one often shifts our perspective and forces us to carry forward lessons, memories, or meaning.
- Speech transition: A good transition acknowledges the close of one section, preserves the essence of it, and carries its relevance into what comes next.
- Language metaphor: “We’ve explored this perspective, and while we’re closing that chapter, the insight it gives us leads naturally into the next point…”
3. Career Milestone or Career Change
- Life transition: Starting a new job builds on the experience from the last one.
- Speech transition: Each point in a speech builds on the previous one, carrying skills and insights forward.
- Language metaphor: “Just as one role equips you for the next, this idea prepares us for the next point…”
4. Seasons of Life
- Life transition: Moving from one season (childhood, parenthood, retirement) to another involves adapting to new rhythms, priorities, and responsibilities.
- Speech transition: A speech moves through seasons of tone and content—sometimes lighter, sometimes deeper.
- Language metaphor: “As one season changes into another, so does our focus now shift from this point to the next…”
5. Relationships (Beginnings and Endings)
- Life transition: Friendships or partnerships often evolve; some end, some deepen.
- Speech transition: A transition helps shift the relationship between speaker and audience, guiding their attention in a new direction.
- Language metaphor: “Like turning the page in a relationship, we’re ready to explore the next chapter of this message.”
From Life to Language
In all of the language transitions above, notice how each completes the thought or idea presented and reveals the next thought/idea that will be developed.
How well do you think about the transition in your presentations?
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