Title: Janaki Severy
1Understanding and Using EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE
in your work and your personal life
- Janaki Severy
- Management Dynamics
- 206-478-7173
- Janakis_at_msn.com
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3What is Emotion?
- Oxford English Dictionary
- Any agitation, or disturbance of mind,
feeling, passion any vehement or excited mental
state - Daniel Goleman
- Emotion refers to a feeling and its
distinctive thoughts, psychological and
biological states, and range of propensities to
act.
4What are Emotions For?
- Emotions guide us in facing situations too
important to leave to intellect alone. Emotions
react to things like danger, painful loss, goal
persistence, bonding with a mate, and building a
family. - Each emotion offers a distinctive readiness to
act and points us in a direction that is
relevant for that emotion. - As challenges are overcome through species
development, our emotional repertoire becomes
imprinted in our nerves as innate automatic
tendencies of behavior. - The more intense the feeling, the more dominant
the emotional mind becomesand the more
ineffectual the rational. - Emotional Intelligence, Daniel Goleman
5Neuroscience and EQ
Limbic System Emotional Brain
Neocortex Thinking Brain
Brain Stem Primitive Brain
6Limbic System from Brain Stem
- Ancient emotional root The olfactory lobe/cells
takes in and analyzes smell rand ests on the
brain stem - Detects molecular signature of smell carried in
the wind. - First layer of cells sorts to determine relevant
categories edible, toxic, sexually available,
enemy or meal. - Second layer of cells sent reflexive messages
throughout nervous system with directions bite,
spit, approach, flee or chase. - Next, a ring developed around the Stem Limbus
means ring This next layer is called the Limbic
System. - As the limbic system evolved, it refined 2
powerful tools Learning and Memory
7Next The Cortex and Neocortex
- First came the thin two layered Cortex
- Regions that plan, comprehend what is sensed and
coordinate movement - Then the Neocortex, with an intellectual edge
- Seat of thought
- Centers put together/comprehend what senses
perceive - Adds to feelings what we think about it
- Allows us to have feelings about ideas, art,
symbols and imaginings. - Allows for the subtlety and complexity of
emotional life such as having feelings about
feelings. - The Cortex and Neocortex interpret but do not
govern life!
8Amygdala and Hippocampus
- Amygdala and Hippocampus were two key parts of
the primitive nose brain that in evolution,
gave rise to the cortex and then the neocortex. - Limbic structures do most of the brains learning
and remembering. - The amygdala can take control over what we do
even as the thinking brain is still coming to a
decision. - The amygdala scans every experience for trouble.
- The amygdala is a psychological sentinel,
challenging every situation and perception for
danger, harm, fear, passion, joy - If it decides yes it reacts like an emotional
tripwire, telegraphing a message of crisis to the
brain.
9Amygdala and Thalamus Hijack the Brain
- The route for hijacking
- Sensory signals travel first in the brain to the
thalamus - Then they travel across a single synapse to the
amygdala - Then a second signal from the thalamus is routed
to the neocortex-the thinking brain - This branching allows the amygdala to begin to
respond first - The amygdala receives direct inputs from the
senses and responds before they are fully
registered in the neocortex - These are the neural pathways for feelings that
bypass the neocortex and give emotion the power
to overwhelm rationality.
10The Emotional Brain
Visual Thalamus
Visual Cortex
Amygdala
From Joseph Le Doux, The Emotional Brain, 1996.
11The heart and brain are linked together in a
coherent network of intelligence.
12Intelligent signals from the heart are messaged
into the brain. Smooth signals create cortical
facilitation jagged signals create cortical
inhibition. Emotional intelligence is affected.
13Three Brains in One
14Be Aware
- We spend much of our time managing emotional
levels such as moodiness and temperaments.. - We may not know when we will be swept with
emotion AND.we can prepare for and intervene
when we do - With no intervention, once the body is on edge,
it escalates easily due to emotional triggers or
any sequence of perceived provocation. It is
difficult to manage at that time. - Adrenal Cortical Arousal is the result . It is an
amygdala driven state of action readiness which
can last for hours/days and keeps us in a
constant state of readiness/danger alert.
15What is EI in Simple Terms?
- It is good old street smarts knowing when to
share sensitive information with colleagues,
laugh at the bosss jokes or speak up at a
meeting. - It is knowing when someone else is not doing well
and keeping that Straight talk for another
time. - It is learned by practicing the skills and
noticing the results. - It is understanding Aristotles statement on
emotional expression. -
- Anyone can be angry, that is easy. But to be
angry with the right person, to the right degree,
at the right time, for the right purpose, and in
the right way, that is not easy!
16Full Smart
Empty Stupid
Blood
Calm Guy
Mad Guy
17What is Emotional Intelligence?
- Emotional Intelligence is the capacity for
recognizing our own feelings, and those of
others, for motivating ourselves, and for
managing emotions well in ourselves and in our
relationships. - Dan Goleman, 1998
18What Does High EQ Demonstrate?
- EQ is a skill, not a trait. EQ can be learned.
- People with high EQ can.
- Build people up, bring them together, and
motivate them to do their best. - Create trust to build productive relationships.
- Demonstrate resilience to perform under pressure.
- Consistently have the courage to make decisions.
- Show the strength to persevere through adversity.
- Can lead a vision to create the future.
-
19What Makes Learning Efficient?
- Doing things over and over again builds
efficiency. - Brain efficiency allow us to repeat behavior
without thinking. - We learn habits, strategies, reactions, skills
this way, whether the behaviors we learn are
useful or not. - Repeat practices cause the brain to create a
neurological pathway so the response is quicker
each time. - The brain doesnt ask if we want the pathway, it
just builds it!
20Neurological PathwaysNature or Nurture?
- 7000 plus twins have been studied from Minnesota
Center for Twin and Adoption Research. - Study traits that are heritable
- Assertiveness 60 heritable
- Affected by Aesthetic Experiences 55
- Happiness 80 heritable
- Other heritable traits Alienation, extraversion,
traditionalism, leadership, career choice, risk
aversion, attention deficit disorder, religious
conviction, and vulnerability to stress.
21Neurological PathwaysNature or Nurture?...Twins
- 1942 set of twins separated at 5 weeks at birth
- 39 years later were found to both have/be.
- dark hair,..6 ft tall
- 180 lbs......same gait
- same inflections..same gestures
- both drove Chevroletschain smoked Salem
cigarettes - married women named Linda.drank Miller Light
Beer - divorced them married women named Betty.Bit
their nails - Heart rates, brain waves, and IQs nearly
identical - Both had elevated blood pressure.severe
migraines - Had the same personality test scores.
22When we want to Change our Patterns
- Awareness of patterns that arent useful is the
first step towards change. - We must be aware of the cues to the undesired
pattern and when to intervene. - We must overcome fear of change, and be willing
to create new behaviors. - New behaviors require practice so the brain can
create new pathways of learning that replace the
old.
23Paradox
- We realize we need new behavior, yet recognize
that change is difficult and we dont know how to
do what is necessary to create the new behavior. - We stay with what we know, because it is
familiar, learned, and has instant access. - Although we begin to demonstrate new behaviors
that we want, we are easily triggered to go back
to the previously learned way because the
pathway is deeper. - Being emotionally triggered to old patterns,
reaffirms the existing neural circuitry and makes
it even harder to stabilize new pathways.
24The Perception Process
- A persons beliefs determine their selection of
perceptions. - Those beliefs determine their thought process.
- Those thought processes and perceptions cause
them to see what they want to see to validate
their beliefs. - Therefore, people remember and refer to what is
useful to validate their beliefs. - A persons thoughts and perceptions support their
beliefs until there is a reason to acquire new
beliefs.
25Stress is in the perception, not the event.
26Two Pathways to Stress, Which can Trigger
Emotion.
- Problems in Perception
- Problems in Communication
- If we Recognize Stress Pathways, Why Cant we
Change Them? - Some emotional reactions and memories are formed
without any conscious, cognitive participation at
all. - We must first become aware of our undesirable
patterns before we can consider changing them. - Once we realize what we are doing doesnt work,
we must be willing to do what it takes to change
it.
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30Elevated Cortisol Levels Health Metabolic
Effect Chronic Health Issue
- Increased appetite, accelerated muscle breakdown,
enhanced fat storage. - Elevated cholesterol and triglyceride levels.
- Elevated blood pressure.
- Alterations in brain neurochemistry ( involving
dopamine and serotonin) - Physical brain cell atrophy
- Obesity
- Heart disease
- Heart disease
- Depression and anxiety
- Alzheimers disease
31Elevated Cortisol EffectscontdMetabolic
Effect Chronic Health Issue
- Insulin resistance/elevated blood sugar levels.
- Accelerated bone resorption and breakdown.
- Reduced levels of testosterone and estrogen.
- Suppression of immune-cell number and activity.
- Reduced synthesis of brain neurotransmitters.
- Diabetes
- Osteoporosis
- Suppressed libido (sex drive)
- Frequent colds/flu/infection.
- Memory/concentration problems.
32The Heart
33Emotions profoundly affect Autonomic Nervous
System Balance, Mental Clarity and Cardiovascular
Efficiency.
34Biochemicals of Emotion
- Neuropeptides are tiny bits of protein that
consist of strings of amino acids. - Neuropeptides carry ligands which bind to
receptors carrying messages from the cell surface
to the interior of the cells. - There are neuropeptide receptors all throughout
the nervous system and the immune system - These messages are changes in behavior, physical
activity, moods, as well as biochemicals such as
endorphins and serotonin. - This multi-directional, body-wide system is the
Psychoimmunoendocrine system,. which includes the
immune system, nervous system, and endocrine
system - Molecules of Emotion , Candace Pert
35 Much of our stress is unseen to us because of
the human capacity for adaptation. We adapt,
ignoring the cues our emotions give to us.
36Symptoms of theemotional virus
- Us vs. them
- Defeatism
- Resentment
- Caustic humor
- Judgment and suspicion
- Anxiety, fear, intolerance, resignation,
despair...
37EQ Competencies
- Self-Awareness
- Self-Regulation
- Self-Motivation
- Empathy
- Effective Relationships
38Self-Awareness Techniques
- Realize emotions are important and that awareness
of your own emotional states is the foundation of
EQ mastery. - Learn to tune in to our own emotional states to
learn valid information about your responses to
stressful situations. - Practice expressing your feelings accurately to
others, especially in non-emotional states to
develop comfortable interpersonal skills.
39Self-Regulation Techniques
- Accept responsibility for choosing your own
emotional responses. - Reframe situations from being stressful to
being challenging. - Uses practices to return to homeostasis
- Be aware of and learn to manage your own
emotional triggers.
40Meditation
- In simple terms, meditation is a mind-cleansing
or emptying process - At a deeper level, meditation is focused
concentration and increased awareness of ones
being
41Meditation
- When the mind is emptied of conscious thought
- unconscious thoughts can enter the conscious
realm - to bring enlightenment to our lives
42Types of meditation
43Progressive Muscular Relaxation
- Relaxation is the direct negative of nervous
excitement. It is the absence of nerve-muscle
impulse. - Edmund Jacobson, M.D.
44Progressive Muscular Relaxation
- Muscles respond
- to thoughts of perceived threats
- with tension or contraction
- Muscular tension
- the most common symptom of stress
- can lead to
- stiffness, pain, discomfort, distorted and
disaligned posture and joint stability
45Progressive Muscular Relaxation
- Muscles can contract in one of three ways
- concentrically (shortening)
- eccentrically (lengthening)
- isometrically (no visible change in length)
46Progressive Muscular Relaxation
- Muscle tension
- produced through the stress response
- primarily isometric
- Over time, muscles
- contracted isometrically
- begin to show signs of shortening
47Progressive Muscular Relaxation
- Systematic approach to relieving muscle tension
- Edmund Jacobson
- a simple technique used to promote rest and
relaxation - by systematically tensing and relaxing the bodys
musculature, from feet to the head
48Benefits of PMR
Reduced muscle tension deepened sense
of relaxation
Decreased levels of muscle tension
Increased awareness of muscle tension
49Self-Motivation Techniques
- Avoid self-defeating thoughts instead focus on
what you want to believe and and want to
happen, not how you feel. - Recognize that emotions affect your performance.
- Work to achieve your flow state, so you are
fully focused, being in the moment, with work
tasks. - Energize yourself by connecting your goals with
your values which creates a connection between
your inner person and your work persona.
50Empathy Techniques
- Recognize and respond appropriately to the
emotions of others. - Express empathy for others and help create
empathy in them. - Learn to see things from another persons
perspective. - Instead of being right be curious.
51Effective Relationship Techniques
- Apply the previous competencies in order to build
the most effective relationships. - Recognize that true teamwork requires productive
relationships. - See emotional reactions as a call to action or
information and deal with them directly and
empathetically. - Use of EQ competencies increases your ability to
have effective relationships.
52Practices to Manage EI Triggers
- Know your body ( somatic) trigger patterns and
how to move from high to low arousal. - Know your cognitive triggers and recognize a
trigger that comes from nowhere is most likely
subconscious. - Recognize the difference between your cognitive
and somatic triggers. - Know the difference between worrying and
constructive reflection. - Practice homeostasis activities like meditation,
prayer, yoga, relaxation response, etc
53- There has been much tragedy
- in my life at least half of it
- actually happened.
- Mark Twain