— Travis Bradberry, co-author of Emotional Intelligence 2.0
▪️ Reacting Emotionally: You might react impulsively to what's going on based on your emotions, instead of using your best thinking to decide how to respond. This gets you the kind of decisions you look back on shaking your head and asking yourself "What was I thinking!?" You're not alone.
▪️ Lack of Empathy: You might struggle to understand other people and how they might feel. This damages your ability to connect with your team, your colleagues, your clients - everyone. It makes it pretty much impossible to build trust and collaborative relationships.
What You Should Be Doing Instead:
▪️ First, prioritize self-mastery. Check in with your emotions and understand what triggers you. Starting to uncover your triggers and blind spots can help you notice where your best thinking and decision-making has been hijacked. Notice the patterns so you can start to manage them - It can be super simple like making an agreement with yourself that you'll wait at least a day, an hour, or even a count to 5 before you respond.
▪️ Next, practice empathy by making an effort to understand other's emotions and perspectives. What might they be feeling? Why might they feel that way? It's ok if that's not what you would feel - in fact, noticing that's not what you would feel is a great sign that you're learning. This can help you build stronger, more collaborative connections with people.
When I work with leaders, we prioritize self-mastery. It's a critical and non-negotiable leadership competency. It's how you learn and apply tools to manage your emotions, so how you think and act aren't just reactions to all the moving pieces around you.
Self-mastery helps you lead more confidently and just plain better. You’ll create a more positive, productive work environment and strengthen your ability to be the go-to person when things get complicated.
If you're ready to work on your self-mastery so you can stop regretting your reactions (or lack of reaction!) and feel confident yourself as a leader in a way that others notice, schedule a consultation with me.
Self mastery helps you to improve communication, build stronger relationships, and make more thoughtful decisions. Together, we’ll work on developing the skills that will help you enjoy being a leader again and as a bonus, boost your team’s performance.
Next week's preview
Next week, we’ll explore the crucial role of stakeholder management and why neglecting it can massively limit your influence.
Go out there and lead,
Asia
Bridgewell LLC - Strategy and Leadership