The basic set-up is the same as before – you and your partner sit on two chairs facing each other. Once again you look at each other from head to toe. Once again a comment emerges from one of you, but this time it is personalised: ‘You have red socks,’ or ‘You’ve got a black jumper.’ This time, the second actor repeats the phrase back in a reversed form. ‘I have red socks,’ or ‘I’ve got a black jumper,’ so that the comment continues to be about the same thing and, as importantly, continues to be true.
In this exercise, however, you should make no attempt to reproduce the intonation of what you hear. You repeat the words, and you try to do so in a way which is open, responsive and organic to the situation. In other words, you do not impose anything on your response, but you allow the other person to affect the way in which your response comes out.
It should also be emphasised here that, whatever phrase is chosen, the actors should not attach too much literal significance to the socks, the jumper, or whatever. The significance must therefore lie in the subtext, which is often not about the black jumper itself but about the actual interaction taking place, whatever that may be.