Emotional Intelligence.
EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE: IS IT MORE IMPORTANT THAN YOUR IQ?
Sep 25, 2015
Our culture places a high importance on
intelligence (IQ) when determining a person’s ability to be successful in the
professional world. In reality, IQ is not the only prerequisite for success,
nor is having a high IQ the most important skill when it comes to succeeding in
life. Life is all about decisions, and new research is showing that having the
ability to understand yourself, your emotions, and the emotions of others is
the key to making the best choices for yourself. That ability to understand
your emotions and the emotions of others is known as emotional intelligence
(EQ).
An experiment published on Psychological
Science conducted by Jeremy Yip and Stephanie Cote of Yale University gathered
some compelling insights into the reasons why a person with a high EQ is more
likely to achieve success in life.
“In two experiments, we examined how a core
dimension of emotional intelligence, emotion-understanding ability, facilitates
decision making. Individuals with higher levels of emotion-understanding
ability can correctly identify which events caused their emotions and, in
particular, whether their emotions stem from events that are unrelated to
current decisions. We predicted that incidental feelings of anxiety, which are
unrelated to current decisions, would reduce risk taking more strongly among
individuals with lower rather than higher levels of emotion-understanding
ability. The results of Experiment 1 confirmed this prediction. In Experiment
2, the effect of incidental anxiety on risk taking among participants with
lower emotion-understanding ability, relative to participants with higher
emotion-understanding ability, was eliminated when we informed participants
about the source of their anxiety. This finding reveals that
emotion-understanding ability guards against the biasing effects of incidental
anxiety by helping individuals determine that such anxiety is irrelevant to
current decisions.”
People who have a well-developed
understanding of emotions do not remove all emotions from their decision making,
but they do remove emotions that have nothing to do with the decision before
them.
A reason why a person with a high EQ tends
to execute better decision making is they tend to have a well-developed
observing ego. An observing ego is the part of your intellect that allows you
to observe what you are feeling objectively, almost as if you are having an out
of body experience with your emotions. As the study says, the participants with
a low EQ needed to be told told by Yip and Cote that their anxiety to perform a
2nd task was actually due to the fact they could not separate their feelings
from the 1st task they were asked to complete.
So, how does your EQ effect your life?
Let’s assume a person with a high IQ / low
EQ achieves professional success in life, as they so often do. They have a good
job, marriage, and children, life is good. Now, let’s say for the purpose of
this example, that stress from that good job manifests itself (as we all know
it does), and it continues for a long period of time. That stress eventually
bleeds into other aspects of life. A person who has an under-developed
understanding of their emotions tends to make a variety of bad decisions due to
an inability to understand what is going on internally. Alcoholism, infidelity,
and domestic abuse are all symptoms of underlying emotional issues that go
unchecked and manifest themselves as something completely different from the
original problem.
In the same example, a person with a high
EQ would quickly realize their stress and feelings of anxiety are only
work-related. They would quickly detach their frustrations from other aspects
of their life, and deal with their emotions constructively. Using healthy
outlets to collect themselves or venting to their spouse or friends is a normal
practice for people with a high EQ.
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