I hate when people talk and you forget what they said five seconds later.
That’s not your fault. It’s bad communication.
Lwspeakstyle fixes that.
It’s not fancy jargon or a secret code. It’s just saying what you mean. Clearly, directly, and in a way people actually remember.
You’ve sat through meetings where no one listened. You’ve sent emails that got ignored. You’ve practiced a speech and still felt flat delivering it.
Why? Because most of us were never taught how to speak so people hear us.
This isn’t about sounding smarter. It’s about being understood faster.
You care because your ideas matter (and) they shouldn’t get lost in weak phrasing or cluttered sentences.
This style works in real life: team chats, client calls, even texting your boss.
No theory. No fluff. Just how to say less and land more.
I’ve used this for years. First in noisy rooms, then on stage, then in writing like this. It works because it respects your time and your audience’s attention.
You’ll learn the core moves (not) rules, not tricks (just) habits that stick.
By the end, you’ll know how to shift into Lwspeakstyle without thinking.
And you’ll notice people leaning in.
Why LwSpeak Style Just Works
I cut the fluff. You do too. That’s why Lwspeakstyle feels like talking (not) performing.
Clarity means using “go” instead of “help movement.”
It means short sentences. No jargon. No guessing what you meant.
Conciseness is not cutting words. It’s cutting noise. I say what matters (and) stop.
You’ve sat through enough rambling emails to know how rare that is.
Connection happens when your reader thinks “They get me.”
Not because you used their name three times.
But because you spoke plainly, paused where they’d pause, and left room for them to think.
These three don’t stack. They fold into each other. Like saying “The meeting’s at 3” instead of “We’re convening a synchronous alignment session at 15:00.”
One works.
The other makes people scroll past.
You already know what clear feels like.
You feel it when someone says exactly what they mean. And nothing more.
Why do we overcomplicate communication? Because we forget people aren’t reading to admire our vocabulary. They’re reading to act.
To understand. To feel seen.
Lwspeakstyle isn’t a trick.
It’s just respect (put) into words.
Speak So People Actually Get It
I used to bury my point in ten-word sentences.
Then I watched people’s eyes glaze over.
Short sentences work. They land. They stick.
You don’t need “use” when “use” is right there. You don’t need “help” when “help” does the job. Big words slow people down.
Jargon? Skip it. Or explain it fast.
Like “API” means “how two apps talk to each other.”
Better yet: just say “how the tools connect.”
Here’s a before:
“The implementation of synergistic cross-functional methodologies enables optimized stakeholder engagement.”
And after:
“We bring teams together. We share updates early. We listen.”
That’s Lwspeakstyle.
You ever read something and think Wait (what) did that mean?
Yeah. That’s what happens when we forget who’s listening.
Clarity isn’t dumbing down.
It’s respect.
I cut filler first. Then I kill passive voice. Then I read it aloud.
If I stumble, it stays cut.
You do that too?
Or do you leave the fluff in and hope people figure it out?
Most meetings fail not because of bad ideas. But because no one said them plainly.
Say it like you’re telling a friend over coffee.
Not like you’re defending a thesis.
Simple doesn’t mean shallow.
It means you did the hard work so they don’t have to.
Cut the Fluff. Say It Clean.

I hate wasting time.
You do too.
Conciseness isn’t about sounding smart. It’s about respecting someone’s attention span. If you ramble, they tune out.
Not later. immediately.
I cut words like I prune dead branches: fast and without guilt. “At this point in time” becomes “now”. “Due to the fact that” becomes “because”. “Has the ability to” becomes “can”.
Ask yourself: What’s the one thing they need to know right now?
Not two things. Not three. One.
I practice before I speak. I jot down a messy thought. Then I slash it in half.
Then slash again.
Here’s a real before and after:
Before: “At this point in time, we are in the process of evaluating various options related to how we might possibly move forward with the project.”
After: “We’re deciding what to do next.”
That second version saves 12 seconds. Over a day, that’s minutes. Over a year?
Hours. You’d rather spend those hours doing actual work (not) decoding word salads.
Lwspeakstyle means saying what matters, then stopping. No filler. No caveats.
No “just to be clear…” (you weren’t clear before? Then fix that.)
Try it today. Say less. Be understood more.
You’ll notice the difference before your next meeting ends.
How to Actually Connect
I talk to people every day. Not at them. With them.
You want your message to stick. So stop talking about yourself. Start talking about them.
Say “you’ll save time” instead of “this saves time.”
Say “you’ll feel confident” instead of “this builds confidence.”
It’s not magic. It’s just respect.
Stories work because they’re human. Tell one where someone like your listener struggled. And then figured it out.
Not a polished case study. A real moment. (Like when my friend tried three outfits before her interview and finally chose the one that felt like her.)
Listening isn’t waiting for your turn. It’s hearing what’s unsaid. Then responding like you heard it.
Empathy isn’t soft. It’s practical. If you don’t know where they’re coming from, you’re guessing.
And guessing loses every time.
Lwspeakstyle is about matching your voice to how people actually live (not) how we wish they did. That’s why I always check What fashion styles are in right now lwspeakstyle before writing anything. It keeps me grounded.
You think connection takes charisma? No. It takes attention.
And attention is a choice.
Are you making it?
Speak So People Actually Listen
I’ve watched people talk for hours and leave no trace.
You know that feeling (when) your words vanish the second you stop speaking.
That’s the pain point. Not fancy vocabulary. Not perfect grammar.
Just being understood.
Lwspeakstyle fixes that. It cuts the noise. It lands the point.
It makes people lean in.
I don’t care if you’re pitching a client, texting your boss, or arguing with your partner. Clarity wins. Conciseness respects time.
Connection builds trust.
And no. You don’t need to rewrite your brain. Pick one thing from this article.
Try it in your next email. Your next meeting. Even your next text.
What’s the smallest change you can make today?
You’ll notice it fast. People will pause. Ask questions.
Remember what you said.
Your relationships will shift. Not because you’re louder, but because you’re clearer.
So stop waiting for confidence to show up first.
Confidence comes after you speak and see someone nod (not) out of politeness, but because they finally get it.
Go try it now. Not tomorrow. Not after you reread everything.
Now.

There is a specific skill involved in explaining something clearly — one that is completely separate from actually knowing the subject. Gloriah Osgoodorion has both. They has spent years working with fashion events and runway highlights in a hands-on capacity, and an equal amount of time figuring out how to translate that experience into writing that people with different backgrounds can actually absorb and use.
Gloriah tends to approach complex subjects — Fashion Events and Runway Highlights, Latest Fashion Trends, Designer Spotlights being good examples — by starting with what the reader already knows, then building outward from there rather than dropping them in the deep end. It sounds like a small thing. In practice it makes a significant difference in whether someone finishes the article or abandons it halfway through. They is also good at knowing when to stop — a surprisingly underrated skill. Some writers bury useful information under so many caveats and qualifications that the point disappears. Gloriah knows where the point is and gets there without too many detours.
The practical effect of all this is that people who read Gloriah's work tend to come away actually capable of doing something with it. Not just vaguely informed — actually capable. For a writer working in fashion events and runway highlights, that is probably the best possible outcome, and it's the standard Gloriah holds they's own work to.