18 Feb 2008 04:53:24 | Brenda Smith, EQ Coach
Love & EQ--The "Geek" we all love.... You know one...you might
have one working for you....you may even be in love with
one...or, maybe you is one.... Affectionately, we call them
geeks, nerds or techies. Yet, any of us can fall into this
category when we're stressed, spending too much time in our
heads and particularly in the left hemisphere of our brains.
While left-brain dominant people are often eccentric, they are
typically linear, logical and rationale. They are efficient. To
be in love, efficiency gives way to effectiveness. It happens to
the best of us--- wanting to be good parents, partners,
colleagues and friends, yet, mired in memos and meetings,
spreadsheets and stock returns or bits and bytes. The business
of life is about relationship; and relationship is less about IQ
and more about EQ--our emotional intelligence.
Men and women are different (like you needed me to tell you).
But across all genders, and throughout all primitive or
civilized cultures, one thing remains the same--the meaning of
emotion. We all have them, though many of us ignore them. High
acheivers, so adept at focusing keen attention, have often
dispensed with them. Today, we can't ignore them--they
contribute up to 96% to our success--and they're their back in
style. These leaky, renegade impulses that seem so out of
control are a resource we can tap into to make the right
decisions, raise capital, make the sale, get the girl (or guy)
and feel fulfilled. Good gut can be yours...all you need is to
pay attention to that queasy feeling in your stomach, the
tension in your neck, the fatigue from your job. Listen. Paying
attention to what (and who) energizes you and what (and who)
discourages you means your emotional sentinels are attuned to
information your well-conditioned mind is missing.
Love & the Addictive Society
Americans consume 5 billion tranquilizers and 16,000 tons of
aspirin each year. Thirty-one percent of the population is
chronically depressed and 79% want to quit their jobs and live
off the land. Why? Because there's not enough love and too many
substitutes for it. We want connection. We want to be valued and
validated. And when we don't get it we buy things, eat things,
wear things, do and use things to give us what we really
want--love. Love is nothing more than giving to another, and
allowing them to be seen, heard and appreciated for who they
are. Can't we make a little space in ourselves for others--and
their differences-- to enter?
A Balanced Heart...Outer space or Inner space?
Most of us have far too much to do and too little time. We spend
so much time thinking that our center of gravity has risen from
our solar plexus up and into our heads. We're off center because
we're a-head of ourselves. How can we give anything to another
when we're depleted and malnourished? Rather than be defeated by
stress, use the creative tension to put more balance into your
life. Balance is not about time management ; it is not about
doing more, but in "be"-ing more. It is holding the center
between making things happen (doing) and allowing things to
happen (being); it is leaving the intellect and heading for the
heart. Take thirty seconds during a stressful moment and follow
this SOS--STOP what you're doing---OXEGENATE by taking three
deep breaths into your body---SEEK APPRECIATION by recalling an
event that was loving and peaceful, bringing your attention to
your heart area---SEEK ADDITIONAL INFORMATION from your heart
and ask, what is the best course of action in this situation.
Stress can make you Fat
Under pressure, our minds start to race, our blood pressure goes
up, and we release a toxic hormone called cortisol into our
blood. It takes 450 miliseconds for the tension to move up our
spine and into our necks and back. Our rational, logical
thinking minds get muddled as the blood moves into our bodies
and into the large muscles that will lead the battle. At the
same time, we are re-allocating our energy. Whatever we've eaten
is listening to our stress hormones and moving into storage to
anticipate a sustained fight. (All this at a traffic light.)
This stored energy--yes, you got it--is stored as fat. Aren't
leaving your office? Eating at your desk? Chances are the stress
hormones are keeping those macronuitrients from doing their job
and packing it into your middle. Rx--get out, take a walk,
change the scenery and breath, using SOS above.
Parenting the Employee
Contrary to what we might think, pay, perks or benefits don't
lead to employee loyalty and creative productivity. Instead,
employees, in a national Gallup survey, said it all hinges on
their immediate manager. Employees want the same thing from them
that children need from their parents---someone who values their
unique contribution, cares for them, sets clear and consistent
limits and encourages and supports their growth. Is it any
wonder that the most effective things we can do as managers is
the same thing we do as parents: Listen to what is being said;
Label it back and lead the next course of action.
How's the weather?
Our culture emphasizes academic training and technical skill,
often to the exclusion of interpersonal effectiveness. Notice
how we avoid personal disclosure or interpersonal connection. We
talk about the project, the event, the goal, the schedule or the
weather. It's more comfortable staying impersonal. We can label
people brilliant or professional, yet people remember moments.
They remember when they have been moved emotionally and someone
has spoken to our passion. Our first relationship is with
ourselves. Knowing, understanding and managing our own emotions
means engaging both our vulnerabilities and our strengths. It is
only from a place of comfort with all our parts that we become
whole and can connect with others.
Presents or Presence
Don't put your money where your mouth. Be there. There is no
greater value than your time or attention. You know you have a
deadline with too much to do and too little time. Your child,
your employee or your unwanted phone call doesn't. Rather than
sigh deeply and hope they figure it out, set a boundary of one
minute, and for that minute, give them your undivided attention.
When someone sits for thirty seconds with your undivided
attention, it's as if you gave them ten minutes.
How's Your EQ?
Consider benchmarking your EQ. peoplesmith coaching offers
assessments and coaching to help professionals become more
effective and more successful with their life goals. For more
information, contact us at http://www.peoplesmith.org or mailto
Coach@peoplesmith.org of course, you may call us for a
complementary coaching session at 412-362-2622.
About Author :
Brenda Smith, MBA, CPEC is a former Wall Street executive and
entrepreneur. peoplesmith uses the unconditionally supportive
and transformative process of coaching to coach international
managers and leaders in emotional intelligence,
leadership,change and resiliency.