5 Habits Of Emotionally Intelligent People
Emotional intelligence is the most powerful tool for
success — not only in in romantic relationships, but business, too. In
fact, the same rules for achieving your goals in business also apply to
love.
Here are five practices that people with high EQs use to achieve success at both work and in their personal lives:
1. Follow actions, not words.
When I hire someone, I don’t pay much attention to lip service about
accountability or hard work. Instead, I screen for a solid track record —
do they meet deadlines? Make calls? Close deals? What are they doing
(not saying)?
In business and personal matters, talk is cheap.
2. Check yourself.
The same rules apply to your romantic and business relationships.
Everyone has bad days and everyone has their quirks. Just because your
date doesn’t feel like dancing doesn’t mean she is embarrassed to be
seen with you, or that you should never go out with her again. Take the
incident for what it is and move on.
3. Keep the end goal in mind.
Those who succeed
in life and business keep an eye on the big picture. This means letting
go of petty perceived slights and road bumps that present themselves
each and every day. When you keep the end goal at the top of your mind,
it is easier to negotiate with a difficult client, create successful,
win-win partnerships, and focus your energy on what is most important —
not getting sidetracked by petty annoyances and putting out little
fires.
That goes for
relationships, too. If a long-term committed partnership with your
spouse is your top priority, then you are less likely to focus on the
proverbial toothpaste cap conundrums that trip up so many couples. Even
bigger issues such as differences in money management or raising kids
are more easily negotiated when you are both focused on lifelong
collaboration.
4. Cleanse out the toxins.
Good business feeds off good energy — and negative people can destroy
an organization. Entrepreneurs with high EQs know there are enough
positive people in the world that there is no need to waste valuable
energy managing the toxic ones. Sometimes even high performers are not a
good fit if they are manipulative, combative or otherwise a negative
force in the office.
Ditto for your love life and business relationships. If someone zaps
your energy or otherwise makes you feel bad about yourself, have the
strength to move on. Emotionally intelligent people have little
tolerance for others who are insincere (or downright lie), critical,
needy or have addictive habits. There are some people who are better out
of your life — or on the other side of the courtroom.
5. Stay connected.
Just because a relationship ends doesn’t mean that you have to
obliterate the bridge. Even if a deal falls apart on a sour note,
emotionally intelligent people make all efforts to take the high road
and keep the connection alive and positive. You never know when you may
cross paths again — or need that person in the future.
Just because a relationship doesn’t last a lifetime doesn’t mean that
you must part ways as enemies. More often than not relationships end
because of differences or circumstances — not personal slights. When a
bridge is still available, there is far more opportunity for you to
enjoy richer experiences on nearly every level.
OK let me guess, The white guy has to work his butt of saved some cash to travel to Cambodia on his vacation. The guy in orange has to be lazy, because he has place to live without pay, has food to eat and he worries nothing,.
ReplyDeleteNop. It's other way around. The Black guy in orange said to the white guy "look @me I dont have to work only wearing this orange uniform, I got all gifts"
ReplyDeleteThen the white guy said ".but you missed all fun like going out with girls".
Hahaha
No that monk is not black, he is Khmer.
ReplyDelete