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'What is the use to reach the moon if we cannot overcome the chasm that separates us from ourselves? This is the most important expedition and without it, all others are useless.' (Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, French writer and pilot (1900–1944) To recognize emotions and to keep a respectful manner with them is a skill of every single human, which should not be underestimated. Emotional competence plays an important - maybe even the most significant – role on the way to personal development, like Antoine de Saint-Exupery already put it to the point. Phsychotherapists talk about humans to be threatened by alienation from themselves due to a lack of self-perception and an overload of external stimuli. The inner world, the world of emotions and needs, runs the risk of being neglected. Futurologists think that values like empathy and emotions will be more requested than ever henceforward. Psychologists realize that the availability of emotional competence is the key which unlocks the door on the way to all other social competences. In this book you will learn about the importance of emotional competence for your personal, professional and private success. It is the ideal manual for everybody who is ready to start out for one's own fountain of success. You get answers to following questions: – What is emotional competence exactly? – How can emotional competence can promote personal, professional and private success? – Which possibilities and methods exist to promote and develop emotional competence for oneself?
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Content
1. Instead of an Introduction
2. Thoughts that led me to write this Book
3. The Cooperation of Emotion, Mind and Body
Our Emotional System
What are Feelings and Emotions?
Emotional Markers
Competence
Empathy – the most important Requirement
4. Emotional Competence in Practice?
The four fields of Emotional Competence
Vigilance for myself and my Emotions
Vigilance towards Others
Vigilance for common Interaction
Ability to regulate Emotions and Motivation to act
5. Why do we need Emotional Competence
Emotional Competence in our private Lives
Significance of Emotional Competence in each Individual’s Career
Emotional Competence in Leadership
Emotional Competence and its Significance in Business
Future Perspective: Encouraging Emotional Competence in Business
The “Sports Side” of Emotional Competence
6. Nurturing and Developing Emotional Competence
Educational Examples for Emotional Competence
Vigilance in Self-Nurturing and Development
Vigilance in Nurturing and Development of Others
Vigilance for mutual Interactions
Ability to regulate Emotions and (self) Motivation to act
7. Further Thoughts
Warning – Feelings are infectious
A Self-Experiment in the Area of Sports
A Tree must be bent while it is young
Happiness – the Dopamine of Life
Humor Research
To lead, you must arouse Emotions
Action and Sports
Nature as “the Skill of Lingering”
Earth yourself
Arts and Crafts - artistic Activities
Music
Writing
Drifting in Quiet
8. Your Fountain – an Outlook
Glossary
Appendix
Further Literature
Acknowledgments
You don´t want to read a long introduction but want to know what this book is all about? You will learn how emotional competence can help you succeed in your personal, business and private life.
You will find the answers to the following questions:
What exactly is emotional competence?
How can emotional competence benefit your personal, business and private life?
What possibilities and methods are there to encourage and develop your own emotional competence?
“What is the use to reach the moon if we cannot overcome the chasm that separates us from ourselves? This is the most important expedition and without it, all others are useless.”
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, French writer and pilot (1900–1944)
A strong trend for new key qualifications (such as the capability for teamwork, cooperation and motivation) has been noticeable in the last few years, which are associated with social or emotional competence.
According to many studies and reports, it is increasingly important to bring a certain portion of these qualities such as emotional competence into our professional as well as private lives.
The psychotherapists say that people are threatened with self-alienation through their lack of self-perception and the overload of external stimuli; and so our innermost, emotions and needs will be neglected.
Futurologists are predicting that values such as empathy and emotions will be in great demand.
Psychologists know that the key to all social competence is in the presence of emotional competence.
At the same time, the educational ideals of our western culture stress the importance of intelligence, logic and rational thinking. Grades, Pisa tests, exams and minimum duration of studies are the focus of the educational discussions.
Where are, in fact, the sensitization and encouragement of emotional competence in our culture, which should be supported in all areas? It has little room in our school system, as well as serious support for emotional competence in areas of adult education - mostly in professional life -, which is of very little value at this time. It is present only in a few curriculum or master courses just as it is not present in leadership training programs.
A further consideration, which led me to this subject and motivated me to write this book, was my many years in adult education, human resources development, consultation and coaching.
I realized - repeatedly - that the participants had the right tools for good communication or recognized the solutions to their conflicts. However, they lacked deeper competences such as the needed amount of empathy or sensitivity to solve the misunderstanding or conflicts in the team, to see the other person´s point of view or at least to try to understand him or her.
Social education has also strongly influenced and inspired me. The subject of how to strengthen our sensibility towards others has often been brought up in seminars that I have held as a trainer. Yet, it is my observation that especially the area of social education needs an awareness of one´s own feelings and emotions. For the percentage of burn-outs in these jobs are growing (but not only here) as the people involved are so devoted that they often forget to look after themselves. The awareness of one´s own psychological well-being is often forgotten.
Likewise, I had the impression that conflicts took place because of the lack of ability for maintaining social interaction, as well as not knowing one´s breaking point and the inability to regulate and motivate oneself.
These four areas are what emotional competence is all about:
To have vigilance for myself and my emotions
To have vigilance towards others
To have vigilance for relationships and common interaction
Ability to regulate one´s own emotions and motivation to act accordingly
The ability to recognize emotions and to deal with them accordingly is not to be underestimated. In this way, emotional competence plays a very important role, if not the most important role – as expressed by Saint Exupéry in the introduction.
There are many very good books about emotional competence. But I found that they lacked ideas how to increase one´s own emotional competence. In this book, I also want to give guidelines and suggestions that can support the promotion of emotional competences. I developed these guidelines from my personal experiences in coaching, training and adult education courses. Clearly, they can only be suggestions. How intensively you will follow them is your own decision. Furthermore, the application is dependent on your own experience and what focus you want to place on developing your own fountain of success.
I would be happy to hear from you if you have questions, suggestions or thoughts which you want to share with me:
E-mail address: [email protected]
“Emotion is the living mother of the entire spirit.”
Friedrich Theodor von Vischer, German philosopher (1807–1887)
To understand emotional competence and thus to understand how emotions affects our lives, we need to think about how we function as human beings. Actually, it is quite simple:
We think, feel and act automatically, without having to think too much about how the process takes place. We have control of a wonderful network of emotions, understanding and body in which thoughts are linked with emotions, emotions link themselves to behavior and our behavior links itself to bodily activity or functions.
The human emotional center is not in the stomach, as many had believed, but in the brain, exactly in the emotional center of the brain, called the gyrus cinguli, amygdala and insula1. This emotional center is directly connected to the pre-frontal brain (center of intelligence/rational thinking).
Brain research has already given us the insight that our emotional center is activated when we make an analytical- rational or cognitive decision.
The emotional center and the cerebral cortex memorize occurrences independently but also function in parallel.
This can be seen in a simple example: should the eye register information e.g. sees a snake, this information will be processed first of all by the eye and then will be forwarded in a switching reaction through the thalamus to the emotional center as well as to the visual cortex. Both will compare this information with an earlier experience and then cause a reaction. These reactions are different from person to person. Therefore, these reactions could be one of the following:
Rational reaction: “run away”.
Emotional reaction: the feeling of “fear” arises.
As we see in this simple example, the interaction of the rational and emotional can actually be used in every different situation. Thus, human activity cannot be reduced to simple logic-analytical competences. In fact, the emotions react faster than the logic, more precisely: emotional processes operate faster, thinking processes operate more accurately.
A typical example: how often do we overreact emotionally e.g in anger or hurt, and say hurtful things to the person that we feel has spoken out of turn. Later on, as soon as our logic has been activated, we regret what we have said.
Our emotional System
“People are not disturbed by things but by the view they have of them.”
Epiktet, Greek philosopher (about 50–125 A.D.)
We have an emotional system, a very distinctive network, which acts as a connection between emotions and understanding. In the course of a life, each human being builds up their own special network, which functions as a circle; thoughts are linked with emotions, emotions are linked with thoughts. Emotions color or influence our impressions and our impressions are colored by our emotions.2
The view or meaning we give to different occurrences, combined with our feelings are very individual for each one of us. Each person has his or her own system of evaluation3 that develops and manifests itself through conscious or unconscious perceptions and opinions. When something has been evaluated, this evaluation is stored in our mind.
Thus it can happen and will happen that in situations that we have cognitively experienced previously, we automatically connect them and recall feelings from a former situation.
This can be disastrous, as an emotional bias can occur and new feelings cannot develop. Even when the overall conditions are different as, for example, when dealing with another person.
A simple example: assuming you have had a bad experience with a police officer who did not treat you right during a traffic control. What will be your reaction when you see a person in a police officer´s uniform or have a traffic check weeks, months or even years later? Your whole individual ratio-feeling network will be activated and the feelings that you experienced the last time will be recalled, possibly with the necessity of resistance and defense, until the current officer, being nice and polite, tells you that your right headlight is not working.
In many daily situations, our emotional network can be inhibiting. Unintentionally, we fall back on old familiar patterns and thus build up our own, not only rational but also emotional reality. Thereby, we are our own worst enemy because we do not let ourselves feel anew and evaluate situations for themselves.
Let us look at this in a sport´s setting: as a golf player, you may have one hole on the whole course where you happen to have difficulties. Alone the thought that you cannot manage this hole, cannot get over the pond or are always out of bounds cause anxious feelings every time you are in an aiming position. This anxiety cramps you, which affects your muscles and the whole energy flow of the body. This results in a bad shot. Again one has had difficulties at this hole, you were again proven right, namely that you have problems with this hole. We fall back on old patterns, although a new pattern of thinking, new feelings could make us successful.
Through evolution, we know that body, emotion and mind can be seen as one unity.4
This system can be equally observed with humans as well as with animals. It is a sort of alarm system, which signals change (internal or external) and causes an appropriate reaction. This is what happens with the feeling of hunger (emotion): most of the time our stomach growls (body), our mind tells us that we need nourishment and so the unity body, mind and emotion has been established.
To understand how this unity works, imagine the reaction plans in the brain or in the amygdala.5 In these plans, the different groups of commands are issued to the body; e.g. with anger and rage, the muscles are tense and blood pressure rises, blood circulation increases which results in a red face or skin and produces more sweat.
That these emotions and emotional stress can have a permanent harmful effect on the body is evident in the list of psychosomatic diseases. Many medical studies demonstrate the longstanding damage on the heart and circulatory system resulting in years of unresolved feelings such as anger. According to this study, even 5 minutes of anger can negatively influence the circulatory system.6
Many popular expressions demonstrate this cooperation of body and emotions: to “break one´s heart”, to “make one´s blood boil”, it “sits heavily on somebody’s stomach”.
We feel something, our body recognizes this and our language expresses it. The amazing thing is that many people (I think too many people) do not understand the language of their own body or ignore their bodies´ signals. It may be that they do not feel these signals, are imperceptible to these signs, have forgotten how to be aware of these or no longer know how to feel.
What are Feelings and Emotions?
“One can unconsciously have much knowledge, when one feels but does not know it.”
Fjodor Michailowitsch Dostojewski, Russian writer (1821-1881)
Feelings and emotions are often colloquially given the same definition or are confused. In this book, I also do not want to make a big difference between these two words. In my opinion, the two words “feeling” and “emotion” are as similar or as related as vacation/holiday or noodles/pasta.
Scientifically, the difference between feelings and emotions can be explained in the following way: