4 Things Emotionally Intelligent People Don’t Do

Give up these bad habits and your natural emotional intelligence will shine

Improving your emotional intelligence is often about what you do less of, not more of.
As a psychologist, I work with many people who look like though they don’t have much emotional intelligence:
  • They trap themselves in cycles of stress and anxiety
  • They self-sabotage as soon as they start to make progress

1. Criticizing Others

Criticizing others is often an unconscious defense mechanism aimed at alleviating our own insecurities.
  • When you criticize someone else for being naive, what you’re really doing is telling yourself that you’re sophisticated. And that feels good.
  • When you silently chuckle to yourself about how terrible someone’s fashion sense is, you’re telling yourself how refined your own taste is. And that feels good.



“Criticism of others is a form of self-commendation. We think we make the picture hang straight on our wall by telling our neighbors that all his pictures are crooked.”
― Fulton J. Sheen

2. Worrying About the Future

Worrying about the future means living in denial about the fundamentally uncertain nature of life.
  • And just because you’re planning — running through countless hypothetical future scenarios — doesn’t mean you’re any better equipped to handle them. Often, you’re just making yourself feel more prepared.
“Worry does not empty tomorrow of its sorrow, it empties today of its strength.”
― Corrie Ten Boom

3. Ruminating on the Past

Ruminating on past mistakes is a misguided attempt at control.
“To think too much is a disease.”
― Fyodor Dostoyevsky

4. Maintaining Unrealistic Expectations

Unrealistic expectations are a misguided attempt to control other people.
  • Set real boundaries on their behavior instead of wishing for perfection.
  • Meet them where they are instead of where you want them to be.
“He was swimming in a sea of other people’s expectations. Men had drowned in seas like that.”
― Robert Jordan

All You Need to Know

If you want to increase your emotional intelligence, try approaching the problem backwards: Instead of trying to improve your emotional intelligence skills, strive to identify and eliminate the habits that are interfering with your natural emotional intelligence in the first place.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Surviving as an Empath During the Time of Coronavirus

5 Positive Lessons from the Coronavirus Crisis

3 Negative Inner Voices and How to Challenge Them